Intimacy

Postpartum sex: realistic timeline.

Sex after birth comes back slowly. The standard six-week clearance is the start of the timeline, not the end. This page describes what is generally known.

Published 2026-05-01Last reviewed 2026-05-048 min read

The standard postpartum advice (six weeks of pelvic rest, then resume) is part of the picture. The rest is that real partnered sex usually does not resume at six weeks for most couples.

The recovery is real. The timeline is longer than the discharge papers imply. Couples who know that and stay in conversation tend to come through it without losing their sexual connection.

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Many
Couples have not resumed partnered sex by 3 months postpartum
Common
Some discomfort or dryness at 12 months postpartum, especially while breastfeeding
Helps
Pelvic-floor physical therapy is increasingly standard postpartum care

Sources listed at the bottom of this page.

What is happening in the body

Hormones shift after birth. Estrogen drops, especially while breastfeeding. The pelvic floor is recovering. Sleep is fragmented. Body image is recalibrating. None of this is a relationship problem. All of it affects sex.

Couples who treat the postpartum period as a recovery rather than a relationship issue tend to come out of it with their sexual relationship intact.

Phases of postpartum recovery

These are typical. Yours may be slower or faster.

01

0 to 6 weeks: pelvic rest

No penetration. Healing is the priority. Many couples maintain non-penetrative intimacy through this stretch and find it preserves the connection.

02

6 weeks to 3 months: cautious return

After clearance, gentle return to penetrative sex. Use lubricant generously. Expect some discomfort early. Expect frequency to be much lower than pre-pregnancy. Both are normal.

03

3 to 12 months: gradual normalization

Hormones recalibrate. Sleep partly returns. The body settles. Most couples find sex returning to roughly half pre-pregnancy frequency. Full return often happens after weaning.

04

12+ months: time to check in

Persistent pain at one year is not normal and warrants a clinical visit. Persistently low desire after weaning is also worth a check. Most issues at this stage have a fix.

What the research describes

What we know from research

Long-term studies of new parents find that most couples who openly discuss what feels possible at each stage do better than couples who avoid the topic. Pelvic-floor physical therapy postpartum is increasingly standard care.

What protects postpartum sex

These are simple, structural moves that keep the relationship intact during recovery.

01

Talk explicitly at 6 weeks

What feels possible? What does not? What does the non-birthing partner want? What is the birthing partner ready for? The conversation at the clinical clearance moment sets the next 6 months.

02

Schedule non-sexual closeness

Even before sex returns, schedule physical closeness. Twice a week, 20 minutes, no expectation of sex. Holding, cuddling, lying together. Preserves the connection.

03

Use lubricant generously

Postpartum tissue, especially while breastfeeding, produces less natural lubrication. The lubricants page covers what to pick.

04

Pelvic-floor PT

Even without overt symptoms, a baseline visit at 6 to 8 weeks postpartum is widely recommended in many guidelines. Many bodies benefit.

Common questions

Why does breastfeeding lower desire?
Hormones. Prolactin (the milk-production hormone) suppresses ovulation and reduces estrogen and testosterone. Both contribute to lower desire and dryness. The effect is biological, not relational. It usually reverses 1 to 3 months after weaning.
When should I see a pelvic-floor physical therapist?
Even without symptoms, a baseline visit at 6 to 8 weeks postpartum is recommended in many clinical guidelines. If you have pain, leakage, or pelvic discomfort, definitely go.
Is it normal to feel uninterested in sex for a long time?
Yes, especially while breastfeeding and in the first year. Concerning if one partner is distressed about it, if it persists past weaning, or if it is accompanied by pain. All worth a clinical visit.
Will my body feel different to my partner?
Some women report yes, some report no. Direct conversation usually resolves this much faster than worrying about it alone.

Sources

  1. American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists postpartum care guidelines.
  2. International Pelvic Pain Society resources.