Most perineal tears heal in 2–6 weeks with hygiene, sitz baths, pain relief, soft stools, and pelvic floor rehab.
The perineum is tender tissue. After birth, a split or a stitched cut here needs steady care, not guesswork. This guide shows what to do each day, what to avoid, and when to see a clinician. You’ll find simple steps, clear timelines, and a plan that keeps you moving without risking the repair.
Healing A Perineal Tear At Home: Step-By-Step
Good care starts with the basics: keep the area clean, reduce swelling, control pain, and avoid strain. The steps below work for most first- and second-degree injuries and support recovery after a deeper repair.
Hygiene That Speeds Recovery
Rinse with warm water after peeing or a bowel movement. Pat dry with soft tissue or a clean towel—no rubbing. Change pads often. Wear breathable underwear. Skip scented products and tight leggings. Air time helps; short periods without underwear at home can reduce moisture.
Use A Sitz Bath For Comfort
A warm, shallow soak relaxes pelvic muscles, eases burning, and boosts blood flow. Aim for 10–15 minutes, 2–3 times a day, or after bowel movements. Keep the tub or basin clean. Dry the area well before dressing.
Ease Swelling And Pain Safely
Cold packs help in the first 24–48 hours. Wrap ice in a cloth and apply for up to 10 minutes, with breaks. Over-the-counter pain relief can help; choose options your clinician said are safe for you, especially if chest-feeding. Topical sprays with local anesthetic can add short-term relief around stitches.
Keep Stools Soft And Stress-Free
Hard stools pull on stitches and increase pain. Drink water across the day. Eat fiber-rich foods—oats, lentils, fruit, veg. A gentle stool softener or an osmotic laxative may be used if advised by your care team. Place a clean pad or folded tissue against the perineum while passing stool to feel supported.
Move, But Protect The Repair
Short walks are good for blood flow and mood. Avoid heavy lifting and deep squats early on. Roll to your side before sitting up from bed. When you sit, use a soft cushion; avoid tight rings that press around the wound. Side-lying can be the most comfortable resting and feeding position.
Early Roadmap: What To Expect Week By Week
Every body heals at its own pace. Stitches usually dissolve on their own. Mild pulling or itching is common as tissue knits together. The roadmap below gives a sense of progress so you can plan rest and activity.
| Grade | What It Means | Usual Healing Window |
|---|---|---|
| First-Degree | Skin only; often small and may not need stitches. | 1–2 weeks for comfort; light soreness may linger a bit longer. |
| Second-Degree | Skin + muscle; usually stitched in layers. | 2–4 weeks for daily comfort; full strength continues to build for months. |
| Third-/Fourth-Degree | Extends into anal sphincter and sometimes rectal lining; always repaired in theater. | 4–8+ weeks for basic comfort; pelvic floor rehab is standard. |
Week 0–1: Calm The Area
Focus on rinsing, pat-drying, frequent pad changes, and sitz baths. Ice for short bursts. Keep stools soft from day one. Pain usually eases each day. A mild tugging feeling near stitches is common.
Week 2–3: Gentle Mobility
Walks get longer. Sitting is easier with a pillow. Many feel ready for short outings. Keep up the warm soaks and soft stools. Some stitches may shed; that’s normal. Watch for new bleeding, foul odor, or hot, swollen tissue.
Week 4–6: Rebuild Confidence
Light core and pelvic floor work fits in now. A few feel ready for low-impact exercise. If sex is on your mind, wait until soreness fades and bleeding stops; use extra lubrication and pick a position that keeps pressure off the wound. Stop if it hurts.
Pelvic Floor Rehab You Can Start Early
Breath-based pelvic floor work reduces pain and speeds return to daily life. The goal is control—both letting go and gentle squeeze—not clenching all day.
Diaphragmatic Breathing
Lie on your side or recline. Inhale through your nose to fill your lower ribs; feel your belly rise. Exhale slow through pursed lips. Do 5–10 cycles, 2–3 times daily. This calms the area and reduces guarding.
Pelvic Floor “Contract-Relax”
On the exhale, think “lift and close” around the vaginal and anal openings. Hold a soft squeeze for 3 seconds. Relax fully for 6 seconds. Start with 5–10 reps, up to 3 sets per day. Stop short of pain or pressure.
Gentle Glutes And Hips
Bridge pose, side-lying leg lifts, and clam shells help pelvic support. Aim for low reps with perfect form. No deep lunges until the area feels steady.
Smart Hygiene And Pain Tools
Small tweaks add up. Keep a “recovery kit” within reach so care stays consistent even on busy days.
Build Your Perineal Care Kit
- Peri bottle for warm rinses after the toilet.
- Unscented pads; change often.
- Sitz bath basin or clean tub.
- Cold packs and a soft towel wrap.
- Topical spray or gel your clinician approves.
- Stool softener, fiber supplements, and plenty of water.
Tips For Peeing And Pooping With Less Pain
Lean forward on the toilet to direct urine away from stitches. Spray warm water as you pee to reduce stinging. For bowel movements, raise your feet on a small stool to straighten the rectum. Breathe out instead of holding your breath.
Trusted Guidance You Can Read
For deeper reading on tear grades, repair, and aftercare, see the NHS page on episiotomy and perineal tears. For clinical detail on prevention and repair, see the ACOG guidance on obstetric lacerations. These resources align with standard care and can help you understand what your team is recommending.
When To See A Clinician Fast
Most tears heal well. Some signs point to infection, wound breakdown, or issues with the anal sphincter. Seek care fast if any item in the table below shows up.
| What You Feel | Likely Meaning | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Mild stinging with urine | Normal tissue healing | Warm rinse while peeing; pat dry |
| New sharp pain, hot redness, or foul odor | Possible infection | See a clinician the same day |
| Wound gaping or heavy fresh bleeding | Possible dehiscence | Seek urgent review |
| Fever or feeling shaky | Systemic infection risk | Urgent assessment |
| Inability to hold gas or stool | Possible anal sphincter issue | Specialist review promptly |
Care After A Deeper Tear (Third Or Fourth Degree)
These injuries extend to the anal sphincter and need theater repair. Recovery is longer, and follow-up is planned from the start. You may go home with antibiotics, stool softeners, and pain relief. A pelvic floor referral is common.
Extra Steps That Help
- Stick to soft stools for weeks, not days.
- Keep walks short and frequent.
- Avoid straining, heavy lifting, or high-impact moves.
- Use side-lying positions for feeds and rest.
- Book pelvic health therapy when offered; early coaching protects the repair.
Sex, Exercise, And Daily Life
Wait until bleeding has stopped and pain has faded. Use lubrication and start slow. Pick positions with you on top or side-lying to control pressure. For exercise, build up with walking and gentle strength. Save running or heavy lifts for later stages, with pelvic floor checks along the way.
Diet And Fluids That Make Healing Easier
Recovery needs steady energy, fluid, and fiber. Mix protein with every meal—eggs, yogurt, beans, fish, or lean meat. Add vitamin-C-rich fruit and veg for collagen repair. Aim for a fiber target that keeps stools soft without bloating. Space water sips across the day, not all at once.
Common Myths—And What Works Instead
“Air Drying Alone Heals Everything”
Fresh air helps, but hygiene matters more. Rinses, sitz baths, and soft stools do the heavy lifting. Use both.
“Pain Means Something Went Wrong”
Early pain is normal. Steady day-by-day improvement is the goal. Pain that spikes or returns after a quiet spell calls for a review.
“Avoid All Movement”
Rest is needed, but complete stillness slows healing. Short walks and breath work keep blood flowing and reduce stiffness.
How To Set Up Your Day So Care Actually Happens
Plan micro-routines. Pair a morning rinse with a sitz bath. Keep your peri bottle in the bathroom and a spare near your feeding chair. Place fiber snacks by your water bottle. Set a phone prompt for pain relief if prescribed on a schedule. Ask a partner or friend to handle tasks that involve lifting or bending.
Getting Back To Intimacy
Healing brings confidence. When you feel ready, choose a time without rush. Use plenty of lubrication. Breathe through any stretch and stop if it burns. If sex stays painful, see a pelvic health therapist; scar massage and graded exposure can help.
Checklist You Can Screenshot
Daily
- Warm rinse after toilet use; pat dry.
- Two short sitz baths.
- Cold packs in short bursts if swollen.
- Water and fiber with each meal.
- Breathing and gentle pelvic floor sets.
- Short walk outdoors.
Weekly
- Review pain trend and pad use (should be less).
- Add light strength moves if soreness is low.
- Touch base with your care team if anything new worries you.
When Healing Stalls
If pain is unchanged after two weeks, if the wound looks open, or if you notice leakage of gas or stool, schedule a check. Early tweaks—antibiotics, extra wound care, or focused rehab—can reset the course. You do not have to wait for a routine postnatal visit if something feels off.
What A Good Follow-Up Plan Looks Like
Plan at least one early review, then a focused visit at 6–12 weeks. People with deeper injuries often get a pelvic floor assessment and, if needed, imaging. Clear goals help: pain below 3/10 at rest, no burning with toilet use, soft stools daily, and steady gains in walking time. Keep notes on symptoms, pad changes, and triggers; this helps your clinician fine-tune care.
Confidence For The Weeks Ahead
Clean care, soft stools, smart movement, and steady rest bring steady gains. If a new symptom pops up, seek care early. With a simple plan and the right help, tissue settles, function returns, and daily life feels normal again.