How to Improve Pelvic Floor Strength with Physiotherapy Exercises

How to Improve Pelvic Floor Strength with Physiotherapy Exercises explores targeted strategies for recovery. Discover new paths to mobility, healing, and personalized care.

Your pelvic floor plays a vital role in everything from bladder and bowel control to sexual function, posture, and core stability. Yet many people don’t realize that these muscles need just as much attention as any other part of the body. Whether you’re recovering postpartum, preparing for surgery, managing incontinence, or simply aiming to improve pelvic health, physiotherapy-based pelvic floor exercises can make a powerful difference.

At YourFormSux (YFS), we offer personalized physiotherapy solutions in Toronto that help you identify, activate, and strengthen your pelvic floor safely and effectively. Our approach goes beyond generic advice to offer functional, science-backed strategies that work with your body—not against it.

Here’s how you can improve pelvic floor strength with physiotherapy-guided exercises, and why expert support is key to getting results.

Understanding the Pelvic Floor

The pelvic floor is a group of muscles and connective tissue that span the bottom of your pelvis. These muscles:

Support your pelvic organs (bladder, uterus, rectum)

Help control urination and defecation

Play a key role in sexual function and sensation

Work with your core and diaphragm to maintain stability and pressure balance

Act as a postural support system during movement

When these muscles are weak, tight, imbalanced, or uncoordinated, it can lead to a range of symptoms including:

Leaking urine or stool (incontinence)

Pelvic organ prolapse

Pain during sex or exercise

Lower back, hip, or pelvic pain

Poor posture and reduced core strength

The good news is that pelvic floor dysfunction is highly treatable—and strengthening these muscles through physiotherapy exercises is one of the most effective ways to restore function.

The Problem with “Just Doing Kegels”

Many people are told to “just do Kegels”—but Kegels aren’t one-size-fits-all. In fact, doing them without proper guidance can lead to overuse, poor technique, or worsening of symptoms, especially if your pelvic floor is tight or overactive rather than weak.

That’s why working with a pelvic floor physiotherapist is so important. At YourFormSux, we help you:

Identify your current muscle tone (tight vs. weak vs. uncoordinated)

Learn how to properly activate and relax the pelvic floor

Coordinate exercises with breathing and core movement

Progress your routine based on your individual needs and lifestyle

Let’s walk through how physiotherapy-based exercises help you safely and effectively build pelvic floor strength.

Step 1: Connect With Your Pelvic Floor

The first step in strengthening any muscle is knowing how to activate it. For the pelvic floor, this means learning how to:

Engage the muscles that stop the flow of urine or prevent passing gas

Breathe diaphragmatically while maintaining that activation

Relax fully between contractions

At YourFormSux, we guide you through tactile, visual, and verbal cues to find this connection. Once you’ve identified proper engagement, we build strength from there.

Step 2: Practice Basic Pelvic Floor Contractions

Once you’ve connected with your pelvic floor muscles, we begin with low-load activation exercises. These may include:

Basic Pelvic Floor Contraction

Sit, stand, or lie down comfortably

Inhale deeply, and on your exhale, gently lift the pelvic floor (as if you’re stopping the flow of urine)

Hold for 3–5 seconds while breathing normally

Relax fully and rest for the same amount of time

Repeat 10 times, 2–3 sets daily

Quick Flicks

Perform a strong, quick contraction of the pelvic floor

Immediately relax

Repeat 10 quick pulses to build responsiveness during sudden activities like coughing or jumping

These exercises help develop both endurance and reactivity, key components of pelvic function.

Step 3: Add Core and Breath Integration

Your pelvic floor doesn’t work alone—it works as part of a pressure system with your diaphragm, abdominals, and back. To strengthen it functionally, we integrate breath and core coordination:

Diaphragmatic Breathing + Pelvic Floor

Inhale deeply, allowing your belly and ribs to expand

Exhale and gently engage the pelvic floor and lower abs

Hold for a few seconds, then release fully

Practice during walking, lifting, or transitions (e.g., standing from a chair)

Core Activation with Movement

While performing bridges, squats, or lunges, coordinate your pelvic floor contraction with your exhale

This teaches the pelvic floor to activate during real-life activities and reduce the risk of leaks or strain

Step 4: Functional Strength and Endurance Training

Once you’ve mastered the basics, we progress to more advanced and functional exercises that challenge your pelvic floor in standing, dynamic, and load-bearing positions:

Wall sits with pelvic floor activation

Glute bridges with pelvic floor hold

Modified planks and bird-dog variations

Lunges and squats while maintaining pelvic engagement

Our physiotherapists tailor your progression to your lifestyle—whether you’re a new mom, a runner, or someone recovering from surgery or managing menopause.

Step 5: Postural Alignment and Habit Coaching

Poor posture and body mechanics can place unnecessary pressure on the pelvic floor, leading to weakness or overload. We help you correct:

Slouching that compresses the abdomen

Breath-holding during lifting or exercise

Excessive core bracing or clenching

Constipation-related straining or poor toileting positions

By optimizing alignment and movement, we ensure your pelvic floor is supported, not stressed, throughout your day.

When to Seek Professional Support

Pelvic floor physiotherapy exercises are for anyone who wants to:

Address urinary or fecal incontinence

Prevent or manage prolapse

Improve postpartum recovery

Manage pelvic pain or tension

Enhance core and postural support

Improve sexual function and comfort

Build resilience before or after surgery

Even if you don’t have symptoms, preventative care helps you stay ahead of dysfunction.

Why Choose YourFormSux?

At YourFormSux, we offer Toronto’s most compassionate and personalized pelvic health physiotherapy. Our approach is:

Evidence-based and results-driven

Respectful and trauma-informed

Tailored to your body, goals, and lifestyle

Focused on both strength and relaxation—because balance matters most

We help you understand your pelvic floor, build confidence, and create a plan that’s sustainable, empowering, and realistic.

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