Urinary Leakage
Leaking when you sneeze, laugh, or run is common, but it's not something you have to accept as a permanent part of your life. Pelvic floor therapy addresses the root cause, not just the symptoms.

You're Not Broken, and You're Not Alone
1 in 3 women experiences urinary leakage at some point in their lives. Most of them have never told their doctor. If you've been quietly managing with pads, cutting back on water, or avoiding activities you love, that's your signal that it's time to do something about it.
Signs and Symptoms
Does Any of This Sound Familiar?
If you’re nodding at more than a few of these, your pelvic floor is asking for attention.
Leaking when you sneeze, cough, laugh, or exercise
Rushing to the bathroom and not always making it in time
Leaking during sex or with position changes
Going to the bathroom "just in case" out of habit
Wearing pads or liners daily
Avoiding trampolines, jumping, or high-impact workouts
Waking up multiple times at night to use the bathroom
Root Cause
What's Actually Causing It
Urinary leakage (also called urinary incontinence) happens when the pelvic floor muscles and supporting structures can’t manage the pressure placed on the bladder. There are two main types: stress incontinence (leaking with physical activity or movement) and urge incontinence (a sudden, intense urge that’s hard to control). Many women experience both.
Pelvic floor weakness is often the culprit, but tightness can also cause leakage. An overactive or poorly coordinated pelvic floor struggles to respond correctly when pressure increases suddenly, like with a cough or a jump. Hormonal changes during pregnancy, postpartum recovery, perimenopause, and menopause all affect pelvic floor function and can make leakage worse over time.
The good news: the pelvic floor is a group of muscles. Muscles can be retrained.
Your Treatment
How Pelvic Floor Therapy Helps
Pelvic floor physical therapy is one of the most effective evidence-based treatments for urinary leakage, and it works for both stress and urge incontinence. Your doctor starts with a thorough assessment to understand what's actually driving your leakage, because a weak pelvic floor and a tight pelvic floor require completely different approaches.
- Your doctor prescribes a specific program to restore strength and coordination to your pelvic floor, calibrated to what the assessment reveals. Doing the wrong exercises makes things worse. Doing the right ones creates real, lasting change.
Bladder Retraining
Structured strategies to reduce urgency and frequency so your bladder responds to you, not the other way around. This includes urge suppression techniques you can use in real life.Pressure Management
Lifestyle modifications to reduce the load on your pelvic floor during daily activities, exercise, and at work. Small changes in how you move and carry yourself make a significant difference.Breathing and Movement Education
How you breathe, brace, and move affects your pelvic floor constantly. We address the patterns that are quietly making your leakage worse and replace them with ones that support your pelvic floor instead.
Your Path to Relief
How Treatment Works
A clear, supportive process designed to meet you where you are with guidance every step of the way
Our Services
Pelvic Physical Therapy That Fits Your Lifestyle
We offer a flexible approach to pelvic health that adapts to your life. Each service is designed to address root causes and build lasting strength.
Virtual Pelvic Physical Therapy
One-on-one virtual pelvic floor physical therapy for women who want expert care and accountability from anywhere.

In-Person Pelvic Floor Physical Therapy
Hands-on pelvic floor physical therapy in Orange County for those ready to resolve pain, bladder issues, and pelvic dysfunction.

Evidence-based strength and nutrition coaching designed to help you improve body composition and rebuild confidence, without sacrificing your hormones, gut health, or your social life.

Frequently Asked Questions
It’s common, but it’s not normal, and it’s not something you have to live with. Urinary leakage is a sign that the pelvic floor isn’t functioning optimally. With the right treatment, most women see significant improvement regardless of how long they’ve had symptoms.
Yes, and here’s why: Kegels only work if pelvic floor weakness is the problem. Many women who leak actually have an overactive or poorly coordinated pelvic floor, and Kegels make it worse. A proper assessment identifies exactly what’s happening so the treatment actually fits the problem.
Yes. Virtual sessions are effective for most cases of urinary leakage. your doctor guides you through assessment, education, and a personalized exercise program, all without leaving home. In-person sessions are also available for patients in California.
Most patients notice improvement within 4-6 sessions. Full results typically come with a complete program of 8-12 sessions, though this varies depending on how long you’ve had symptoms and other contributing factors.
You Don't Have to Plan Your Life Around Leaks
Leaking isn’t something you have to manage around forever. A free consultation is the first step to figuring out what’s actually driving it.
