Stop Kegeling—Try These Pelvic Floor Stretches Instead

If you’ve been told to “just do Kegels” to fix your pelvic floor, you’re not alone. But what most people don’t realize is that too many Kegels can actually make things worse. For many active adults, especially runners and lifters, the real solution starts with learning how to release tension through pelvic floor stretches that help your muscles move and relax the way they should.

Your pelvic floor works like any other muscle group—it needs strength, but it also needs flexibility and recovery. When those muscles stay tight, you may notice pain in your hips, lower back, or even while running or sitting.

That’s your body telling you it’s time to stretch, not squeeze.

In this blog, we’ll walk through simple, science-backed stretches that help restore balance and coordination to your pelvic floor, so you can move freely, breathe easier, and get back to feeling strong again.

12 Pelvic Floor Muscle Stretches Recommended By Pelvic Floor Physical Therapists

Why Stretching Matters for Active Adults

If you’re running along the Poudre Trail, crushing workouts at Altitude Running, or logging hours at the gym, your pelvic floor muscles are working harder than you think.

They stabilize your pelvis, support your pelvic organs, and control your breathing and core strength during every lift, stride, and jump.

When these muscles get too tight, you may notice pelvic pain, hip tension, or urinary incontinence during activity.

These pelvic floor stretches help relax pelvic floor muscles, restore mobility, and improve performance. They’re especially helpful if you’ve been doing Kegel exercises and things feel worse instead of better.


pelvic floor stretches

1. Child’s Pose

Start on your hands and knees with your knees bent and feet flat behind you. Lower your hips back toward your heels and breathe deeply into your belly. You should feel your pelvic muscles relax as your torso sinks forward.

Focus on practicing diaphragmatic breathing here. With each inhale, let your belly expand. This helps calm a hypertonic pelvic floor and releases tension in the pubic bone and inner thighs.


2. Happy Baby

Lie on your back, bring your knees bent toward your chest, and hold your feet with your hands. Let your pelvis sink into the floor and breathe deeply to relax your pelvic floor muscles.

This stretch targets tight pelvic floor muscles and helps improve bladder control and bowel movement coordination. Try holding for 60 seconds while focusing on gentle belly breathing.

When your pelvic floor moves well, everything else follows. Let’s rebuild your foundation together.

Get in touch today with our Fort Collins Pelvic Health Team at (970) 500-3427 and take the first step toward lasting strength and wellness.


pelvic floor stretches

3. Supported Deep Squat

Stand with your feet flat and wider than shoulder-width apart. Lower into a squat and rest your elbows on your inner thighs. Keep your heels down. You can hold onto a sturdy object like a squat rack for support.

This pelvic floor exercise lengthens the pelvic muscles while improving hip mobility. It’s perfect for athletes preparing for heavy lifting or long runs in Fort Collins’ City Park 10K events.


4. Supine Butterfly Stretch

Lie on your back with your knees bent and the soles of your feet touching. Let your legs fall open and breathe into your pelvic area.

This position allows the pelvic floor and core muscles to fully release. It’s a gentle way to calm tense pelvic floor muscles before bedtime or after training.


5. Seated Pelvic Tilt

Sit on the edge of a sturdy chair with your feet flat and hands on your hips. Slowly tilt your pelvis forward and back.

This improves awareness of your pelvic floor muscle movement and helps retrain coordination with your core muscles. It’s great for anyone who sits long hours at a computer screen or experiences pelvic floor dysfunction from posture habits.


6. Deep Breathing in 90/90 Position

Lie on your back, place your legs on a chair so your knees are bent at 90 degrees, and breathe deeply into your belly. Feel your ribs expand and your pelvic floor relax.

This simple diaphragmatic breathing exercise releases pelvic floor muscle tension and teaches you how to connect your breathing to your pelvic movement.


pelvic floor stretches

7. Kneeling Hip Flexor Stretch

Kneel with your right leg forward, left knee on the floor. Gently shift your hips forward until you feel a stretch through the front of your left leg and pelvic area.

This stretch targets nearby muscles that often pull on the pelvis, creating tight pelvic floor sensations. It’s essential for runners and cyclists who overuse their hip flexors to add this one to their pelvic floor stretches.


8. Figure Four Stretch

Lie on your back, cross your right leg over your left thigh, and pull your legs toward your chest. You’ll feel the stretch through your hips and pelvic floor.

This helps release the tense muscles that connect your hips and pelvic floor, improving blood flow and sexual function.


9. Supported Bridge with Breathing

Lie on your back, place a yoga block or cushion under your pelvis, and let your hips open. Breathe deeply and imagine the base of your pelvic floor expanding with each inhale.

This position gently decompresses the pelvic organs and improves circulation. It’s one of the ideal pelvic floor stretches for athletes dealing with mild pelvic floor hypertonicity or fatigue from repetitive training.


10. Reclined Hamstring Stretch

Lie on your back and lift one leg toward the ceiling, keeping the other bent. Hold behind your thigh and flex your foot.

This movement releases tension through your pelvic muscles and hamstrings, which often tighten together. Balanced flexibility in these areas helps prevent pelvic floor problems during performance training.


11. Side-Lying Adductor Stretch

Lie on your side with your top leg extended forward and heel resting on the floor. You’ll feel the stretch along your inner thighs and pelvic muscles.

This is one of the best pelvic floor stretches for runners who struggle with groin or pelvic pain after long distances on trails like Lory State Park.


12. Diaphragmatic Breathing in Child’s Pose

Return to child’s pose and focus only on breathing. Place one hand on your belly and one on your pelvic floor. As you inhale, feel your belly and pelvic floor expand. As you exhale, let them gently rise.

Practicing this regularly helps the pelvic floor function properly and prevents over-reliance on Kegel exercises that can tighten already hypertonic pelvic floor muscles.


Rebuild Balance. Restore Performance.

If your pelvic floor feels tight or unresponsive, it’s not weakness—it’s imbalance. These pelvic floor stretching exercises help you restore mobility, reduce pain, and reconnect to your body’s natural strength.

When pelvic floor stretches alone aren’t enough, pelvic floor physical therapy can help you uncover what’s causing your tightness and create a treatment plan designed for your sport, your lifestyle, and your goals.

Call (970) 500-3427 today to start your recovery and get back to the activities you love—stronger, looser, and more confident in every movement.

pelvic floor stretches

Restoring Strength and Flexibility Through Pelvic Floor Physical Therapy

Why Strength and Stretching Work Best Together

When your pelvic floor muscles stay tight, every movement feels harder than it should. You might notice discomfort during workouts, soreness after long runs, or even pelvic pain that doesn’t go away with stretching alone. That’s because tight muscles can’t generate true strength or control.

At our clinic, we use a performance-based approach that blends pelvic floor stretches with functional pelvic floor exercises to retrain your body from the inside out. Our goal is to help you move naturally, lift safely, and breathe efficiently during every activity—from training at Altitude Running to hiking the Horsetooth Falls Trail.

What a Personalized Plan Looks Like

Every treatment plan starts with a one-on-one physical exam focused on your movement patterns, posture, and breathing. We look at how your pelvis, hips, and core muscles coordinate during activity. This helps us find where your pelvic floor dysfunction starts and how to correct it.

We design an individualized plan that may include:

  • Manual therapy and soft tissue mobilization to release restricted areas
  • Pelvic floor stretches and movement retraining to improve control
  • Diaphragmatic breathing to help your pelvic muscles relax and function properly
  • Progressive strengthening to prevent future tension or instability
  • Coaching on lifestyle adjustments that support long-term pelvic health

Each session focuses on restoring your balance, improving mobility, and giving you the confidence to return to high-level activity without pain or fear of relapse.

Your Recovery, Your Performance

You deserve to train, move, and live without discomfort holding you back. Our pelvic floor physical therapists guide you through every phase of recovery so your body can perform at its best—whether that’s running the Fort Collins Marathon, lifting at the gym, or chasing your kids around Spring Canyon Park.

When your pelvic floor moves well, everything else follows. Let’s rebuild your foundation together.

Get in touch today with our Fort Collins Pelvic Health Team at (970) 500-3427 and take the first step toward lasting strength and wellness.

a man standing in front of a sign that says up and running physical therapy.
AUTHOR

Dr. AJ Cohen

Up And Running Physical Therapy

"We Help Runners And Active Adults In The Fort Collins Area Overcome Injury And Be Stronger Than Ever, Avoid Unnecessary Time Off, All Without Medications, Injections, Or Surgery."
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