Difference between WAIT and BLOCKED thread states

The difference is relatively simple.

In the BLOCKED state, a thread is about to enter a synchronized block, but there is another thread currently running inside a synchronized block on the same object. The first thread must then wait for the second thread to exit its block.

In the WAITING state, a thread is waiting for a signal from another thread. This happens typically by calling Object.wait(), or Thread.join(). The thread will then remain in this state until another thread calls Object.notify(), or dies.


The important difference between the blocked and wait states is the impact on the scheduler. A thread in a blocked state is contending for a lock; that thread still counts as something the scheduler needs to service, possibly getting factored into the scheduler's decisions about how much time to give running threads (so that it can give the threads blocking on the lock a chance).

Once a thread is in the wait state the stress it puts on the system is minimized, and the scheduler doesn't have to worry about it. It goes dormant until it receives a notification. Except for the fact that it keeps an OS thread occupied it is entirely out of play.

This is why using notifyAll is less than ideal, it causes a bunch of threads that were previously happily dormant putting no load on the system to get woken up, where most of them will block until they can acquire the lock, find the condition they are waiting for is not true, and go back to waiting. It would be preferable to notify only those threads that have a chance of making progress.

(Using ReentrantLock instead of intrinsic locks allows you to have multiple conditions for one lock, so that you can make sure the notified thread is one that's waiting on a particular condition, avoiding the lost-notification bug in the case of a thread getting notified for something it can't act on.)


A thread goes to wait state once it calls wait() on an Object. This is called Waiting State. Once a thread reaches waiting state, it will need to wait till some other thread calls notify() or notifyAll() on the object.

Once this thread is notified, it will not be runnable. It might be that other threads are also notified (using notifyAll()) or the first thread has not finished his work, so it is still blocked till it gets its chance. This is called Blocked State. A Blocked state will occur whenever a thread tries to acquire lock on object and some other thread is already holding the lock.

Once other threads have left and its this thread chance, it moves to Runnable state after that it is eligible pick up work based on JVM threading mechanism and moves to run state.


Simplified perspective for interpreting thread dumps:

  • WAIT - I'm waiting to be given some work, so I'm idle right now.
  • BLOCKED - I'm busy trying to get work done but another thread is standing in my way, so I'm idle right now.
  • RUNNABLE...(Native Method) - I called out to RUN some native code (which hasn't finished yet) so as far as the JVM is concerned, you're RUNNABLE and it can't give any further information. A common example would be a native socket listener method coded in C which is actually waiting for any traffic to arrive, so I'm idle right now. In that situation, this is can be seen as a special kind of WAIT as we're not actually RUNNING (no CPU burn) at all but you'd have to use an OS thread dump rather than a Java thread dump to see it.