Hip pain is one of the most common complaints among active adults and intermediate gym-goers, and one of the most mismanaged. Whether it flares up during an exercise session or lingers as background discomfort after an injury, it can quietly limit what you do and how confidently you move.
The good news is that with the right approach, hip pain doesn't have to derail your progress. Understanding what's driving it and addressing it with physiotherapy for hip pain is how you can move from discomfort back to full capacity.
Why Hip Pain Happens
Hip pain rarely has a single cause. More often, it's the result of several factors accumulating over time:
- Muscle imbalances: Strength, mobility and motor control deficits can alter how load is distributed across the hip, placing stress on structures that aren't prepared to handle it.
- Overuse and repetitive movement: Hip pain from running long distances, cycling frequently or repeating the same movement patterns without adequate recovery can gradually irritate the joint and surrounding tissues.
- Overload: When tissues are exposed to more load than their current capacity allows, whether from a sudden training spike or poor progressive overload, pain can follow.
- Tight hips: Limited hip mobility affects how load travels through the entire lower limb chain. Tight hips during squats, for example, often shift stress toward the joint rather than distributing it through the muscles that should be doing the work.
- Joint changes: Conditions such as arthritis involve degeneration of the hip joint, contributing to pain, stiffness and reduced range of motion over time.
- Bursitis: Inflammation of the bursae around the hip can produce sharp or aching pain, particularly during movement or sustained positions, such as when squatting.
- Previous hip injury: Inadequately rehabbed injuries have a tendency to resurface, often at the worst possible time.
Signs You Should Seek Physiotherapy
Not all hip discomfort requires immediate clinical attention, but some signs may indicate that it’s time to get a proper assessment:
- Persistent discomfort that doesn't improve with rest or stretching
- Chronic pain that limits your movement, daily activities or training performance
- Swelling, clicking associated with pain or a catching sensation in the joint
- Difficulty returning to previous exercise levels after a hip injury
- Hip pain when squatting or during other loaded movements, which may indicate underlying issues that stretching alone won't resolve
When to Seek Urgent Medical Review
While most hip pain is related to load, muscle imbalances or joint irritation, certain symptoms warrant prompt medical evaluation before any rehabilitation begins. These include:
- Sudden severe pain following trauma such as a fall, accident or injury
- Inability to bear weight on the affected leg
- Persistent pain throughout the night that doesn't change with sleeping position
- Fever, unexplained weight loss or signs of infection
- Progressive numbness, weakness or other neurological symptoms
If any of these apply, please seek medical attention first to rule out fractures, infections, inflammatory conditions and other underlying causes.
Physiotherapy for Hip Pain: What Recovery Looks Like
New to physio? Here’s what to expect from your first physiotherapy session in Singapore:
Assessment and Individualised Treatment
Good physiotherapy for hip pain starts with understanding, not assumptions. At UFIT, assessments combine strength testing, movement analysis and load tolerance evaluations to identify the root contributors to your pain. The same tools used at the start of your care are used throughout, so your progress is tracked objectively.
From there, treatment is tailored to your specific presentation, training habits and goals.
Strengthening and Mobility Work
The bulk of effective hip pain rehabilitation is active. This typically includes:
- Core and glute strengthening to build the stability that the hip joint relies on.
- Hip mobility drills and stretches to restore range of motion and reduce the load consequences of tight hips.
- Gradual reintroduction of load with progressive hip pain exercises designed to rebuild capacity without aggravating symptoms.
This isn't generic. The exercises you're given should match where you are in your recovery and where you're heading.
Manual Therapy and Pain Relief Techniques
Hands-on techniques, from joint mobilisation to soft tissue work, can help reduce tension, improve joint mobility and ease discomfort in the short term. At UFIT, manual therapy is used adjunctively, meaning it creates a window that makes exercise rehabilitation more effective, rather than replacing it.
Preventing Hip Pain in the Future
Managing a hip injury is one thing; ensuring it doesn't become a recurring pattern is another. A few habits go a long way here:
- Warm up and mobilise before workouts, especially sessions involving squats, deadlifts and running
- Balance your training across strength, flexibility and adequate recovery
- Refine your technique in lifts, squats and running mechanics: Small form adjustments often carry outsized benefit for hip health
- Schedule physiotherapy check-ins even when you're symptom-free: Early detection and proactive care are far simpler than managing a full flare-up
Hip Health and the Active Adult
For active adults in their 30s to 50s, hip health isn't just about avoiding pain. It's fundamental for long-term mobility and independence. A well-functioning hip allows you to train consistently, perform well, and stay active on your own terms.
Physio for hip pain supports that in practical ways:
- You can train without constant pain setbacks interrupting your progress
- You return to previous performance levels safely and systematically, rather than guessing when you're ready
- You reduce the risk of recurring hip injuries through targeted rehabilitation and education, not just passive treatment
At UFIT’s physio clinic, the goal isn't simply to relieve your pain. It's to ensure you leave stronger, better informed and more resilient than when you arrived. This means standardised assessment and reassessment using VALD systems and PROMs, shared decision-making where your plan is built with you, and access to our fitness community.
With us, your health journey doesn't end when your hip pain does.
Don't Let Hip Pain Hold You Back

Training is only part of the equation. Recovery is where adaptation actually happens.
Prioritising quality sleep, quality nutrition, and active recovery can make a meaningful difference to your progress. If you're regularly under-sleeping or not sufficiently fuelling, your body may struggle to keep up with the demands of your training.
It also helps to track your stress, energy levels, and soreness over time. These signals can indicate when you're pushing too hard and at risk of overtraining, or when you have more capacity to give.
Mobility work, stretching, and recovery tools such as foam rolling or sports massage can support performance and keep your body moving well between sessions.
Early intervention leads to faster recovery and better long-term outcomes. At UFIT, physio for hip pain doesn't end when symptoms settle. The pathway continues through pain reduction, capacity rebuilding, return to performance and long-term joint resilience:
- Assessment: Detailed movement and strength evaluation to identify root contributors. Progress is tracked, not guessed.
- Targeted exercise therapy for hip pain: Rebuilding strength, mobility and load tolerance specific to your lifestyle and training demands.
- Prevention: Once pain settles, focus shifts to improving long-term hip capacity and movement efficiency to reduce recurrence.
Go beyond short-term relief. Book a consultation with us today and start your journey towards recovery and improved performance.

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