Postpartum

Pelvic Floor Exercises After Birth: Restoration and Prevention Guide

Your pelvic floor took a hit during pregnancy and delivery — whether vaginal or C-section. Restoring its strength prevents long-term leaking, supports organs, and improves sexual function. But start carefully, and know when to get professional help.

Quick Answer: After vaginal delivery, start gentle pelvic floor exercises around week 6, beginning with awareness and basic contractions before progressing. After C-section, your pelvic floor is still weakened from pregnancy, so the same timeline applies. Kegel exercises are just one tool — breathing, relaxation, and correct engagement matter as much as strength. If you’re leaking urine at 6 months postpartum, ask for pelvic floor physical therapy, which is covered by many insurance plans.

Why Pelvic Floor Recovery Matters

Your pelvic floor is a hammock of muscles that support your bladder, bowel, and uterus. During pregnancy, hormones soften tissues, and the baby’s weight strains everything. Vaginal delivery stretches and sometimes tears these muscles. Even C-section delivery leaves the pelvic floor weakened from 9 months of being sat on by a growing baby.

Without intentional recovery, you might experience:

These aren’t permanent, but they won’t fix themselves. Your pelvic floor needs intentional work to heal and strengthen.

Timeline for Pelvic Floor Recovery

Weeks 1-2 (Hospital/Immediate Postpartum)

Right now, your pelvic floor is swollen and traumatized. Rest is the priority. Don’t do Kegels yet. Just breathe normally and let swelling reduce.

Weeks 3-6 (Early Recovery)

Once initial swelling is gone, you can start gentle awareness exercises. These aren’t about strength — they’re about reconnection.

Weeks 6-12 (Progressive Strengthening)

After your 6-week postpartum checkup (when your provider has cleared you), you can progress to slightly longer holds and more reps.

3-6 Months and Beyond

Continue pelvic floor exercises, but think of them like brushing your teeth — maintenance, not a cure. By 3-4 months, if you’re still leaking or experiencing pain, this is the time to see a pelvic floor physical therapist, not a reason to wait longer.

What Pelvic Floor Physical Therapy Does (And When to Get It)

Pelvic floor PT is different from general physical therapy. These specialists examine your pelvic floor (both externally and internally) to see what’s actually happening:

Pelvic floor PT includes:

When to seek pelvic floor PT:

Most insurance plans cover pelvic floor PT if your provider writes a referral. It’s not frivolous — it’s rehabilitation from a significant physical event.

Common Pelvic Floor Mistakes

Mistake 1: Doing Kegels wrong. Many people tighten their glutes, inner thighs, or abs instead of the pelvic floor. You should feel a gentle lift inside, not tension in surrounding muscles. If you’re not sure, ask a pelvic floor PT to teach you.

Mistake 2: Doing too many Kegels. Your pelvic floor is a muscle. Overworking it causes tightness and dysfunction, not strength. 3 sets of 10, done correctly, 3-4 times per week is plenty.

Mistake 3: Skipping relaxation. You can’t have strength without the ability to relax. If your pelvic floor is tight even at rest, strengthening is the wrong treatment — you need release.

Mistake 4: Waiting too long to get help. Leaking at 6 months postpartum is not “just what happens.” It’s treatable. Most people improve significantly with pelvic floor PT.

Mistake 5: Assuming you’re “broken” after delivery. Your pelvic floor is temporarily weakened, not broken. With intentional work, most people recover fully and often gain strength they never had before pregnancy.

Exercises Beyond Kegels

Pelvic floor health isn’t just about Kegels. A strong, functional pelvic floor requires:

Breathing practices: Diaphragmatic (deep) breathing connects your pelvic floor to your core. As you inhale, your diaphragm lowers and your pelvic floor relaxes. As you exhale, your pelvic floor engages. This is the foundation for all movement.

Core integration: Your pelvic floor works with your deep core muscles (transverse abdominis, multifidus). Exercises that engage your core engage your pelvic floor. Planks, dead bugs, and bird dogs are helpful — but only if done with good breathing and pelvic floor connection.

Functional movement: Once your pelvic floor is stronger, practice engaging it during activities that challenge it: coughing, jumping, laughing, lifting, or sex. This teaches your pelvic floor to work when you need it.

Walking: Daily walking is underrated. It activates your pelvic floor naturally and supports overall recovery.

When to Contact Your Provider

Reach out if you experience:

These might indicate complications that need assessment.

Sex and Pelvic Floor Health

Many people experience pain during sex postpartum. This often comes from:

Sexual function usually improves 3-6 months postpartum as pelvic floor strength returns. If it doesn’t, pelvic floor PT can help.

The Bottom Line

Your pelvic floor needs intentional care after delivery. Start with gentle awareness at week 3-6, progress to strengthening after your 6-week checkup, and don’t hesitate to seek pelvic floor PT if you experience leaking, pain, or heaviness beyond 6 weeks. Your pelvic floor is resilient and most people recover fully with appropriate care.

Last Updated: March 26, 2026 | Author: iPrego Editorial Team


Medical Disclaimer: This article provides general postpartum recovery information but is not a substitute for medical advice. If you experience severe pain, significant leaking, or other postpartum concerns, contact your healthcare provider. Every recovery is unique.