Postnatal Fitness Guide
A safe, evidence-based guide to returning to exercise after birth — from the first days home to running your first 5K postpartum. No rushing. No pressure.
Your Recovery Roadmap
Recovery after birth is not linear — and it looks different after vaginal delivery versus C-section, first baby versus fourth, and varies enormously by individual. Use this timeline as a framework, not a rulebook.
Your body has done something extraordinary. The first week is entirely about rest, healing, and bonding. Zero formal exercise. Gentle walking to the kitchen and back is enough.
Begin gentle pelvic floor awareness exercises and deep breathing. Short walks (10–15 min). The goal is reconnecting with your body, not building fitness. No impact, no loading.
Your 6-week postnatal appointment clears you for exercise — but "cleared" doesn't mean "fully healed." It means you're safe to begin a graduated return. Ask your provider about pelvic floor physio referral regardless of how you feel.
Gentle strength work begins: bodyweight squats, glute bridges, modified planks, and swimming. Longer walks (30+ min). Still no running, heavy lifting, or high-impact exercise — this is the most commonly rushed phase.
With pelvic floor clearance, you can progress to moderate strength training and light jogging. Running readiness should be assessed — not assumed. Many women aren't pelvic-floor ready for running until 3–6 months postpartum.
Most women can return to all pre-pregnancy activities by 6 months, with appropriate progressive loading. High-impact sports, heavy lifting, and running are all on the table — with proper preparation and pelvic floor support.
Safe Movement
The foundation of postnatal recovery. Deep belly breathing reactivates the diaphragm-pelvic floor pressure system disrupted during pregnancy. Practice lying on your back with knees bent.
Kegels are the starting point — but postnatal pelvic floor work goes beyond simple contractions. Both strengthening (tightening) AND relaxing are critical. Hypertonic (too tight) pelvic floors are as problematic as weak ones.
The most underrated postnatal exercise. Start with 10-minute walks and build by 10% per week. Walking promotes circulation, mood, and gentle functional loading without impact stress on the healing pelvic floor.
One of the best early postnatal strength exercises — activates glutes and hamstrings while gently loading the core without excessive abdominal pressure. Progress from double-leg to single-leg as strength returns.
Functional, safe, and highly effective for postnatal lower body strength. Focus on quality over depth initially — a shallow squat with perfect form beats a deep squat with pressure symptoms.
Once pelvic floor function is confirmed by a physiotherapist, progressive resistance training is safe and beneficial postnatally. Start with cables and machines before loading through free weights. Deadlifts, rows, and pressing movements are all appropriate.
Abdominal Recovery
Diastasis recti (DR) — the separation of the rectus abdominis muscles at the linea alba — occurs in approximately 60% of women during or after pregnancy. It is not a tear, not a hernia, and in most cases resolves with appropriate rehabilitation.
The old guidance was to avoid all core exercise with DR. Current evidence is much more nuanced — the key is loading the tissue appropriately, not avoiding it. A qualified pelvic floor physiotherapist can assess your specific gap and tension and guide your rehab.
The pressure to "bounce back" after having a baby is real — and it's wrong. Postnatal fitness isn't about getting your body back. It's about building a body that can carry, lift, run, and live fully with your new child. That takes time. Give it that time.
Running Return Guide →Common Questions