Recovery Timeline

Joint Replacement Recovery Timeline

A practical recovery timeline after hip or knee replacement, including early walking, swelling, pain control, therapy, driving, work, and longer-term healing.

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Best Practical Answer

Joint replacement recovery happens in phases. The first days focus on safety, walking, pain control, swelling, and wound care. The first weeks focus on mobility, therapy, sleep, and confidence. The following months focus on strength, endurance, gait quality, and return to activities. Timelines vary by hip versus knee, procedure complexity, medical history, and surgeon protocol.

Original TJS Patient Journey Table

Milestones to track and discuss

This table is an original TJS patient education tool. Use it to organize questions for joint replacement recovery timeline; your surgeon's instructions should always control.

Journey stageWhat to trackWhat a good plan clarifies
Before surgeryConfirm diagnosis, medications, home setup, support person, transportationPatient can explain the plan and knows who to call
Surgery dayArrival time, anesthesia plan, mobility check, discharge criteriaDischarge is based on safety, not the clock
First 2 weeksWalking quality, swelling, pain control, wound status, therapy instructionsRecovery is trending forward without warning signs
Weeks 3 to 6Driving/work questions, gait, stairs, range of motion, enduranceActivity increases without major next-day setbacks
Safety decision path:
  1. Is the symptom expected for this stage, or is it worsening?
  2. Does it affect walking, breathing, wound safety, pain control, or the ability to follow instructions?
  3. Use the discharge instructions to decide: continue the plan, call the care team, or seek urgent care.

First 24 to 72 hours

Expect instructions about walking, medication, swelling control, wound care, fall prevention, and when to call. Early progress is often measured by safe movement and understanding the plan, not by doing as much as possible.

Weeks 1 to 2

Patients commonly work on short walks, transfers, swelling control, sleep routines, bowel regimen when needed, therapy exercises, and learning how much activity is too much.

Weeks 3 to 6

Many patients build walking tolerance, reduce assistive-device use when safe, improve knee motion or hip confidence, and begin discussing driving or work timing if cleared.

Months 2 to 6 and beyond

Strength, endurance, balance, warmth, swelling, stiffness, and confidence can continue to change for months. Revision surgery, complex cases, and preoperative weakness may take longer.

How to Use This Page

Bring it into the conversation.

This guide is meant to make the appointment more useful. Patients can use it to write down questions, compare their current symptoms with the usual decision points, and identify what they do not yet understand. The most useful version of the conversation is specific: what joint hurts, what activities are limited, what has already been tried, what support exists at home, and what outcome would actually feel meaningful.

What TJS Should Confirm

Individual details still decide the plan.

Total Joint Specialists should confirm the diagnosis, procedure fit, medical risk, location, surgery-center plan, discharge instructions, therapy plan, and follow-up schedule for the individual patient. Online guidance can explain the pathway, but it cannot clear someone for surgery, guarantee same-day discharge, diagnose a complication, or replace instructions from the surgeon, anesthesia team, physical therapist, or discharge nurse.

Practical Checklist

Details to clarify before relying on a plan

Write these down before the visit or before discharge, because the safest instructions are the ones the patient and support person can repeat back clearly.

  • Which hip or knee problem is being treated, and what evidence supports that diagnosis?
  • Which procedure or nonsurgical option is being considered, and what alternatives remain reasonable?
  • Which office, surgery center, surgeon, anesthesia plan, and follow-up pathway apply to this patient?
  • Which symptoms should trigger a call, an urgent visit, or emergency care after surgery?
  • Which medication, therapy, wound care, driving, work, and activity instructions override general online education?
Common Questions

Patient journey FAQ

Is hip replacement recovery faster than knee replacement recovery?

Often hip replacement feels easier earlier, but individual recovery varies. Knee replacement commonly has more swelling and motion work.

When can I drive?

Driving depends on side of surgery, medication use, reaction time, pain, strength, range of motion, and surgeon clearance.

Why do I still feel tired?

Fatigue can persist after major surgery because of healing, sleep disruption, medication changes, anemia, activity increases, and stress on the body.

Sources

Source support

This page is grounded in orthopedic society and academic medical-center patient education. It should be interpreted through your surgeon's instructions and discharge paperwork.

Medical Review

Reviewed for patient education.

This page was reviewed by Charles A. DeCook, MD on May 12, 2026. It is reviewed at least annually and whenever major clinical guidance, source references, or practice facts change.

The content is educational and is not a substitute for diagnosis, surgical clearance, discharge instructions, or emergency care. See the editorial policy.

Urgent symptoms: Follow your discharge instructions and seek urgent care for severe or life-threatening symptoms.

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