Objective: Hypermobility (HM) is a hereditary or acquired condition of connective tissue in which the synovial joints have range of movement beyond their normal limits and its effects on disc degeneration (DD) is not fully known. In our study, We aimed to reveal the relationship between joint hipermobility, lumbar DD and also low back pain. Method: The cases aged between 20-50 years with low back and/or leg pain were included in the study. Their lumbar MRIs were evaluated using Pfirrmann grading system. For the cases meeting the study criteria, the Beighton score was used for evaluating the generalized joint laxity, and the 1998 Brighton criteria were used to assess the benign joint hypermobility syndrome. The cases were also evaluated prospectively for pain by using the visual analog scale (VAS) and for disability using the Oswestry disability index (ODİ). Results: Hundred and seventy-two cases with a mean age of 36.82±7.62 years including 112 female (65.1%), and 60 male (34.9%) patients met the inclusion and the exclusion criteria, While 14 % of cases had joint HM, and HM was not encountered in 86% of them. There was no statistically significant difference in the values of Pfirrmann grade parameters at all lumbar disc levels between the groups with and without HM (p> 0.05). Likewise, there was no statistically significant difference between the groups concerning the VAS and the ODI values (p>0.05). Conclusion: These findings suggest that HM may not be a risk factor for increased lumbar DD grades, VAS and ODI scores in patients aged between 20-50 years.