The Truth About Pelvic Floor Pain During Pregnancy and Postpartum reveals an angle you may not have considered. Discover insight-rich strategies tailored to your healing path.
Pregnancy and childbirth transform a womans body in profound and powerful waysbut they also introduce unexpected challenges, especially when it comes to pelvic floor pain. Despite how common pelvic discomfort is during and after pregnancy, many women are told to ignore it, tolerate it, or expect it to disappear on its own.
At YourFormSux (YFS), we help Canadian women navigate the physical changes of pregnancy and postpartum with personalized physiotherapy support. Pelvic floor pain is not something to suffer throughits something you can treat, manage, and recover from. Lets break down the truth behind this misunderstood issue and what you can do about it.
Understanding the Pelvic Floor During Pregnancy
Your pelvic floor is a group of muscles that supports the uterus, bladder, and bowel. During pregnancy, it works overtime:
Supporting the increasing weight of your growing baby
Managing the hormonal effects of relaxin and progesterone, which soften tissues
Adjusting to shifting posture and spinal alignment
Stabilizing your core as your abdominal wall stretches
As the load increases, your pelvic floor may become either overly tight from working too hard, or fatigued from being stretched. Both can result in pain.
Common types of pelvic floor pain during pregnancy include:
Deep pelvic or vaginal aching
Tailbone pain or coccyx sensitivity
Pubic symphysis pain (pain in the front of the pelvis)
Pain with walking, turning in bed, or getting out of a car
Pelvic pressure or a heavy sensation with standing
This pain is not just part of the process. Its a clear signal your body needs support.
The Role of Physiotherapy During Pregnancy
Pelvic floor physiotherapy can relieve pain and improve function without medication or invasive treatment. Through gentle, pregnancy-safe methods, your physiotherapist can:
Release tension in tight pelvic floor muscles
Improve mobility in the hips, sacrum, and lower back
Teach breathwork to reduce pressure buildup
Support posture as your body adapts to new weight distribution
Provide strategies for moving, sleeping, and lifting without triggering pain
When addressed early, these techniques reduce pain, prevent long-term dysfunction, and prepare your body for birth.
Why Postpartum Pain Is CommonBut Not Normal
After deliverywhether vaginal or via C-sectionyour pelvic floor goes through a major transition. Postpartum pain may come from:
Scar tissue (episiotomy, tearing, or surgical incision)
Pelvic muscle trauma or overstretching
Nerve sensitivity or inflammation
Poor posture and muscle compensation
Holding tension from birth-related fear, fatigue, or trauma
Its easy to assume that pain is just part of healing, but persistent discomfort is often a sign your muscles havent fully recovered or re-coordinated.
You may notice postpartum pelvic floor pain as:
Pain during intercourse or tampon use
Pelvic aching after long periods of standing
Painful bowel movements or urination
Lower abdominal or deep hip discomfort
Sharp pain with sudden movements or lifting your baby
None of these symptoms should be ignored or minimized.
The Physiotherapy Approach to Postpartum Recovery
YourFormSux supports women with gentle, targeted treatment to ease pelvic floor pain and rebuild function. Postpartum physiotherapy may include:
Manual therapy to release tight or guarded pelvic muscles
Breath training to reconnect your diaphragm and core
Scar tissue mobilization to improve healing
Postural realignment to support lifting and baby care
Exercises to gradually restore strength and movement confidence
Whether youre six weeks or six years postpartum, its never too late to address pelvic pain and regain comfort.
When to Seek Help for Pelvic Floor Pain
You should seek a pelvic physiotherapy assessment if:
Pain disrupts your sleep, walking, or daily activity
You avoid intimacy due to discomfort or fear
You feel pressure, bulging, or falling out sensations
Symptoms persist beyond six weeks postpartum
Your intuition says something isnt quite right
Pain is your bodys way of asking for attentionnot something you need to ignore, normalize, or push through.
The Truth: You Dont Have to Tolerate the Pain
Pregnancy and motherhood bring enough challenges. Pelvic floor pain shouldnt be one of them. With the right care, your body can recover with strength, balance, and dignity.
At YourFormSux, we empower women through every stage of motherhood with evidence-based care and deep body awareness. Whether you’re newly pregnant, weeks postpartum, or years into parenting, were here to support your healing journeywithout shame, guesswork, or delay.





