How to Build Strength in Your Pelvic Floor with Physiotherapy’s Help

How to Build Strength in Your Pelvic Floor with Physiotherapy’s Help reveals an angle you may not have considered. Discover insight-rich strategies tailored to your healing path.

If you’ve ever experienced bladder leaks, pelvic pressure, discomfort during exercise, or postural instability, your pelvic floor may be calling for help. These muscles play a crucial role in supporting your bladder, bowel, uterus or prostate, and spine—but they’re often overlooked until something goes wrong. The good news is that pelvic floor strength can be rebuilt—and physiotherapy is one of the most effective and safe ways to do it.

At YourFormSux (YFS), we support clients across Canada in restoring pelvic strength through evidence-based, personalized physiotherapy. Whether you’re recovering from childbirth, surgery, or dealing with chronic weakness, this guide will show you how physiotherapy helps build the strength you need—step by step.

Why Pelvic Floor Strength Matters

Your pelvic floor is more than just a group of muscles. It’s a dynamic system that works with your core, diaphragm, and deep back muscles to support pressure, movement, and stability. When it’s weak or uncoordinated, you might experience:

Urinary leakage or urgency

Pelvic organ prolapse

Pain during intimacy

Poor posture or lower back pain

Difficulty with bowel movements

Loss of core stability during activity

These issues can interfere with your daily life, confidence, and performance. But with the right strategy, they’re reversible.

Step 1: Get an Individualized Assessment

Before starting pelvic floor exercises, it’s essential to understand what your body needs. Not everyone needs the same kind of strengthening—and sometimes what feels like weakness is actually tension or imbalance.

Physiotherapy helps by:

Assessing your pelvic floor’s ability to contract, relax, and coordinate

Identifying if your symptoms are caused by weakness, overactivity, or poor control

Evaluating posture, breath mechanics, and core alignment

Tailoring a plan based on your unique baseline and goals

You’ll walk away knowing exactly what to strengthen, how to do it, and what to avoid.

Step 2: Learn Proper Muscle Activation

Most people don’t engage their pelvic floor correctly at first. Some over-squeeze, some bear down without realizing, and others compensate with glutes or abs. That’s why proper guidance is essential.

Physiotherapy helps by:

Teaching you how to isolate your pelvic floor using cues you understand

Using feedback methods like breath coordination and visualization

Monitoring how your pelvic floor behaves during real-life activities (sitting, lifting, walking)

Ensuring that you’re engaging the right muscles—not everything else around them

Once you master control, you can start building strength from a solid foundation.

Step 3: Build Endurance and Power Gradually

The pelvic floor must perform both short bursts of activity (like coughing or jumping) and long holds (like standing upright). Your plan should reflect both.

Physiotherapy helps by:

Creating a progression plan: starting with gentle holds, then building to endurance and strength

Matching your exercises to your lifestyle demands—whether that’s caring for children, lifting at the gym, or running

Incorporating real-world functions like posture training, breath work, and lifting mechanics

Ensuring your pelvic floor gets stronger in the context of your movement, not in isolation

No two people strengthen the same way—your plan is shaped around your life.

Step 4: Integrate Strength into Daily Movement

The pelvic floor doesn’t work alone. It should activate with your breath, core, and movement throughout the day. Strength isn’t just about reps—it’s about coordination.

Physiotherapy helps by:

Training you to recruit the pelvic floor during movements like squats, stairs, and bending

Aligning breath with movement to reduce intra-abdominal pressure

Improving postural alignment so your pelvic floor isn’t overloaded

Teaching you how to move smarter, so your pelvic strength supports—not hinders—your activity

This stage is where symptoms begin to fade, and confidence in your body returns.

Step 5: Maintain Progress and Prevent Setbacks

Strength isn’t something you build once and forget—it needs consistent care. Stress, hormonal shifts, poor posture, and inactivity can all weaken the pelvic floor over time.

Physiotherapy helps by:

Teaching you how to monitor symptoms early

Offering tune-ups and progress check-ins

Adapting your exercise plan as your life changes—whether postpartum, post-surgery, or through aging

Giving you long-term strategies for breath, posture, and muscle care

You’ll finish your program with the tools to stay strong—now and for years to come.

Signs You’re Getting Stronger

Not sure if your efforts are working? With physiotherapy support, you’ll notice:

Fewer leaks during exertion or coughing

Improved ability to hold in urine when rushing to the bathroom

Less heaviness or bulging in the pelvic region

Better posture and core stability

More confidence during exercise, sex, or daily movement

These improvements signal not just stronger muscles, but better function overall.

You Don’t Have to Guess—You Can Be Guided

Strengthening the pelvic floor isn’t about doing hundreds of random exercises. It’s about knowing your body, following a clear progression, and learning from someone who sees the full picture.

At YourFormSux, we don’t just give you a list of exercises—we give you a plan that works for your body.

With our physiotherapy guidance, you’ll go from unsure and symptomatic to strong, informed, and empowered. Whether you’re just starting or rebuilding after a setback, we’ll help you strengthen your pelvic floor the right way—safely, effectively, and confidently.

Book a Consultation

Leave a Reply