Your go to guide for all things postpartum!
At some point in the postpartum season, most new parents find themselves thinking about movement again. Maybe it’s a longing for the energy that exercise used to give you. Maybe it’s the way your body feels unfamiliar right now and you want to start reclaiming it. Or maybe your provider mentioned something about pelvic floor recovery and you realized you have no idea where to begin. Whatever brought you here, this post is for you.
Returning to fitness after having a baby is not about bouncing back. It’s about building forward; slowly, intentionally, and with a deep respect for what your body has just been through. This guide will walk you through what’s actually happening in your postpartum body, a realistic timeline for returning to exercise, which movements to prioritize and which to avoid early on, and how to build a sustainable approach to fitness in a season that doesn’t leave much margin.
Let’s start with the most important thing: your body did something extraordinary. Give it the time it needs.
Before we talk about exercise, it’s worth understanding the full scope of what postpartum recovery involves because this context shapes everything about how and when you return to movement.
Even an uncomplicated vaginal birth involves significant physical stress on the perineum, pelvic floor muscles, and surrounding tissue. Tearing or an episiotomy adds a healing wound to the picture. The pelvic floor, a group of muscles and connective tissue that supports the bladder, uterus, and bowel, has been under enormous pressure throughout pregnancy and through the pushing phase of labor. It needs time and targeted rehabilitation, not just rest.
A cesarean section is major abdominal surgery. Recovery involves healing through seven layers of tissue, including the abdominal muscles that are central to virtually every movement the body makes. The six-week postpartum clearance appointment often leads new parents to believe they are ‘healed’ and ready to resume activity. It’s important to understand that internal healing from a c-section continues for months. Returning to high-impact exercise too early after a cesarean is one of the most common postpartum fitness mistakes. It is also one of the most consequential.
Diastasis recti is the separation of the rectus abdominis (the ‘six-pack’ muscles) along the midline. It affects the majority of pregnant people to some degree by the third trimester. For many, this separation resolves naturally in the weeks after birth. For others, it persists and requires specific rehabilitation. Exercising with undiagnosed or unaddressed diastasis recti can worsen the separation. It can also lead to core dysfunction, back pain, and pelvic floor issues. Diastasis recti is one of the primary reasons a pelvic floor physical therapist assessment is so valuable in the early postpartum period.
The hormone relaxin, which loosens ligaments and joints to allow the pelvis to open during birth, remains elevated for several months postpartum. It remains elevated even longer in breastfeeding parents. This means joints are more mobile and more vulnerable to injury than usual. High-impact activities, heavy lifting, and movements that place significant lateral stress on joints carry more risk in the postpartum period than they would at any other time in a person’s fitness life.
The standard six-week postpartum appointment is an important milestone but it’s not a green light to return to all activity. Most six-week appointments involve a brief physical examination and a general conversation about how you’re feeling. They are rarely comprehensive enough to assess pelvic floor function, diastasis recti, abdominal wall integrity, or readiness for specific types of exercise.
Many postpartum fitness and pelvic health specialists now recommend thinking of the six-week appointment as the beginning of the return-to-exercise process rather than the end of the recovery phase. Ideally, that appointment includes a conversation about what you want to return to, any symptoms you’re experiencing (leaking, prolapse symptoms, pain, pressure), and a referral to a pelvic floor physical therapist if indicated.
A pelvic floor physical therapist specializes in the rehabilitation of the muscles and connective tissue of the pelvic region. In many countries, pelvic floor PT is a standard part of postpartum care. In the United States, it is not — but it is increasingly recognized as one of the most valuable investments a postpartum person can make in their long-term health. If you have any symptoms of leaking, pelvic pressure, pain with intercourse, or core weakness, ask your provider for a referral or seek one out independently.
The following is a general framework. Every body is different, every birth is different, and your return to exercise should be guided by your own symptoms. Ideally a pelvic floor physical therapist or a postpartum-informed fitness professional will help guide you. Midwest Newborn Services offers a personalized approach to postpartum fitness. Each plan is tailored specifically for each of our clients’ unique needs according to their postpartum journey.
The first two weeks postpartum are for rest, nourishment, and healing. Walking, specifically short, gentle, flat walks, is appropriate and encouraged as soon as it feels comfortable. Everything else should wait. This is not the time to think about exercise. It is the time to heal.
As you move through weeks two to six, gentle rehabilitation of the pelvic floor and deep core can begin. This does not look like exercise in any traditional sense. It looks like breathing, reconnecting with your body, and learning to activate and release the muscles that have been under significant stress.
After your six-week clearance (and ideally after a pelvic floor PT assessment), you can begin building more intentional movement. The focus at this stage is still rehabilitation and foundation-building rather than performance or intensity.
Key signs that you are progressing appropriately: no leaking with movement, no pelvic pressure or heaviness, no pain, and no significant increase in postpartum bleeding after activity. Any of these symptoms is a signal to pull back and consult your provider or a pelvic floor PT.
For most people, a gradual return to more demanding exercise such as running, lifting, or group fitness classes becomes appropriate somewhere between three and six months postpartum. This timeframe is dependent on individual healing, birth type, and pelvic floor function. This is a wide window for good reason. C-section parents, those with significant diastasis recti, and those with ongoing pelvic floor symptoms typically need to stay on the slower end of this timeline.
Running deserves special mention because it is often one of the first things people want to return to and one of the most commonly returned to too early. Running is a high-impact activity that places significant load on the pelvic floor. The widely referenced ‘Return to Running’ guidelines, developed by pelvic health physiotherapists Groom, Donnelly, and Brockwell, recommend waiting until at least 12 weeks postpartum and passing a series of functional benchmarks before returning to running regardless of how you feel.
Equally important to knowing what to do is knowing what to skip while your body is still in active recovery. In the first several weeks and months postpartum, it is generally wise to avoid:
Movement and mental health are deeply connected and this is especially true in the postpartum period. Research consistently shows that regular physical activity reduces symptoms of postpartum depression and anxiety, improves sleep quality, boosts mood through endorphin release, and supports the sense of identity and agency that new parenthood can sometimes erode.
This does not mean you need to be doing intense workouts to experience these benefits. Even gentle daily walks can meaningfully support mood and mental wellbeing. These walks can be taken alone, with a friend, or with the baby in a carrier or stroller. Movement doesn’t have to be a production. It just has to be consistent.
If you find that you want to move but can’t because of exhaustion or the demands of round-the-clock newborn care, that is a support problem, not a motivation problem. When families have support in place, parents create space to take a walk, attend a class, or simply breathe. Support can be overnight newborn care, daytime help, or simply someone to hold the baby for an hour. Rest and recovery, including physical recovery, happen faster when the load is shared.
Finding time to move with a newborn at home is a real logistical challenge. A few approaches that work well for postpartum parents:
We want to say this clearly: the pressure on postpartum people to return quickly to their pre-pregnancy body is harmful, unrealistic, and not supported by how human physiology actually works. The postpartum body is not a body that failed to stay the same; it is a body that grew, sustained, and birthed a human life, and is now in the process of healing and adapting.
The goal of postpartum fitness is not to look a certain way. It is to feel strong, to heal well, to reduce injury risk, to support mental health, and to build a sustainable relationship with movement that carries you through parenthood and beyond. That goal is worth pursuing but at a pace that respects your body, not one dictated by a culture that has historically asked too much of postpartum people too soon.
Be patient. Be consistent. Trust the process. Your body knows what it’s doing.
At Midwest Newborn Services, we understand that physical recovery, including the ability to return to fitness, depends heavily on rest, support, and having space to prioritize your own wellbeing. When overnight care is handled by a specialist and parents are sleeping, when daytime support creates a window to take a walk or attend an appointment, when a new parent feels confident rather than anxious because they have experienced guidance, all of that creates the conditions that recovery requires.
We’re not medical professionals, and we don’t have a magic wand or an easy button. But we are here to help create the conditions that make recovery, physical, emotional, and mental, genuinely possible. If you’re expecting and want to think through what postpartum support could look like for your family, we’d love to connect.