Pelvic Floor Exercises: Strengthening, Mobility, and PT Routines

May 2026 Shaun Hinklein

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Effective exercises for pelvic health

Pelvic floor recovery is built on coordination, breath, and progressive loading — not just Kegels. The quality of each contraction (and full relaxation) often matters more than how many you do.

  • Diaphragmatic breathing — the foundation for pelvic floor coordination. Inhale into the lower ribs, exhale gently and feel the pelvic floor lift.
  • Kegels (controlled) — short, focused contractions paired with a full relaxation. Quality matters far more than rep count.
  • Hip and glute strengthening — the pelvic floor works with the hips. See our breakdown of gluteus medius exercises.
  • Hip flexor stretches — tight hip flexors can pull the pelvis into a posture that overworks the pelvic floor. Try our hip flexor stretches.
  • Squats and bridges with breath integration — functional strengthening that loads the pelvic floor in real-life patterns.
  • Posture and sitting resets — prolonged sitting affects pelvic alignment. See painful hips after sitting.

Pelvic health is highly individual — some patients need to strengthen, others need to learn to relax. For low back overlap, see back pain relief exercises at home. For broader context, visit our pelvic pain overview.

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