Human intoxication with the seafood poison ciguatoxin, a dinoflagellate polyether that activates voltage-gated sodium channels (Na V), causes ciguatera, a disease characterised by gastrointestinal and neurological disturbances. We assessed the activity of the most potent congener, Pacific ciguatoxin-1 (P-CTX-1), on Na V1.1–1.9 using imaging and electrophysiological approaches. Although P-CTX-1 is essentially a non-selective Na V toxin and shifted the voltage-dependence of activation to more hyperpolarising potentials at all Na V subtypes, an increase in the inactivation time constant was observed only at Na V1.8, while the slope factor of the conductance-voltage curves was significantly increased for Na V1.7 and peak current was significantly increased for Na V1.6. Accordingly, P-CTX-1-induced visceral and cutaneous pain behaviours were significantly decreased after pharmacological inhibition of Na V1.8 and the tetrodotoxin-sensitive isoforms Na V1.7 and Na V1.6, respectively. The contribution of these isoforms to excitability of peripheral C- and A-fibre sensory neurons, confirmed using murine skin and visceral single-fibre recordings, reflects the expression pattern of Na V isoforms in peripheral sensory neurons and their contribution to membrane depolarisation, action potential initiation and propagation.