Hip Surgery Rehabilitation

What to Expect When You Visit Our Physiotherapist for Hip Surgery

When you visit us after hip surgery, we assess your pain, swelling, walking pattern, hip movement, and strength. Treatment may include gentle manual therapy to reduce stiffness, walking retraining, strengthening of the hip and core muscles, and progressive functional exercises such as stairs and balance work. We guide you through a structured rehabilitation program to help you safely return to daily activities and improve confidence in movement.

Time to favourable outcome

3–6 months typical

Start Median: 4 months Favourable outcome
100% 75% 50% 25% 0%
0mo1.5mo3mo4.5mo6mo

Results Comparison

Physio Recovery Rate

With TCM 80% – 95%
No Treatment / Spontaneous 60% – 75%
How Does the Treatment Work?
Manual Therapy Reduces stiffness and supports early pain control.
Exercise Rehab Rebuilds hip strength, walking control and daily function.

Sustained Relief (%)

3 / 6 / 12 months
3 months 72%
6 months 85%
12 months 90%

Factors Influencing Recovery Speed

Early Mobilisation

• Gentle movement and walking practice help restore confidence. • Early safe activity supports smoother functional recovery.

Consistent Strengthening

• Hip, core and balance exercises improve walking quality. • Following precautions and managing swelling usually supports better progress.

Poor Exercise Adherence

• Inconsistent rehab can leave weakness and poor walking patterns. • Missing key exercises often slows return to daily activity.

Returning Too Early

• Overloading before strength and balance return can create setbacks. • Fear of movement or complications may also slow recovery.

How do we estimate outcomes?

We combine insights from published research, our own experience and that of our peers, along with typical treatment timelines and conservative modelling assumptions, to map out common trajectories. The ranges presented reflect our experience only.

Important Disclaimer

This tool is intended for visualisation and general educational purposes only, to help clients gain a broad understanding of some common conditions managed by our practitioners. It is based on practitioner experience and selected published research. It does not account for individual circumstances, including your specific condition, medical history, medications, or other personal factors. Health conditions are complex, and outcomes can vary significantly between individuals. Our treatments are not a substitute for medical care provided by your healthcare professional. You should always follow the advice and treatment plan recommended by your medical practitioner, and consult them directly for guidance specific to your situation.