Exercise mistakes during pregnancy can increase strain, worsen discomfort, and affect overall movement safety.
Pregnancy changes the way the body moves, breathes, stabilizes, and recovers.
Yet one of the biggest exercise mistakes many women make during pregnancy, is treating prenatal exercise exactly like regular fitness.
Some stop exercising completely because they are scared something might harm the baby.
Others go in the opposite direction and continue intense workouts without adapting to the physical changes happening inside the body week after week.
As a physiotherapist, I have seen both extremes create problems.
Sometimes it is the woman doing endless squats while ignoring pelvic heaviness.
Sometimes it is the woman terrified to even walk because relatives told her exercise is unsafe during pregnancy.
In reality, most uncomplicated pregnancies benefit from movement.
The key is understanding how to move intelligently.
Quick Answer
Many pregnant women unknowingly make exercise mistakes that increase pelvic floor pressure, worsen back pain, contribute to abdominal coning, or delay postpartum recovery. Common mistakes include breath-holding during workouts, copying intense online routines, ignoring pelvic heaviness, doing aggressive core exercises, and overtraining despite fatigue.
Physiotherapists recommend focusing on breathing mechanics, posture, pelvic floor coordination, modified strength training, and sustainable movement instead of extreme workouts. Safe prenatal exercise can improve circulation, reduce pain, support mental health, and prepare the body for labor and postpartum recovery.
Modern research strongly supports prenatal exercise for improving physical and emotional health during pregnancy.
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists states that physical activity during pregnancy is generally safe and beneficial for most women. (American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists 2024)
But there is a huge difference between exercising and exercising correctly.
This article is not another generic “pregnancy workout tips” blog.
It is a physiotherapy-based guide focused on the real Exercise mistakes women make during pregnancy, including the ones most social media fitness pages never talk about.
Key Takeaways
- Pregnancy workouts should be modified according to body changes, not copied from regular fitness routines.
- Breath-holding during exercise may increase pelvic floor pressure and abdominal strain.
- Pelvic heaviness, leaking urine, or abdominal coning are signs the body may need exercise modifications.
- Safe strength training during pregnancy may support posture, stability, and postpartum recovery.
- Overtraining and ignoring fatigue can worsen physical stress during pregnancy.
- Pelvic floor health involves both contraction and relaxation, not endless Kegel exercises.
- Walking, swimming, prenatal Pilates, and controlled resistance training are commonly recommended prenatal exercises.
- Good prenatal exercise focuses on sustainability, breathing mechanics, and pressure management.
Thinking Pregnancy Means Complete Rest
One of the oldest myths still surviving today is that pregnant women should avoid movement and stay in bed as much as possible.
For healthy pregnancies, excessive inactivity can actually worsen:
- stiffness
- back pain
- swelling
- fatigue
- circulation issues
- constipation
- sleep quality
I often notice that women who completely stop moving during pregnancy struggle more with physical recovery later.
The body adapts to movement.
When movement disappears, muscles weaken surprisingly fast.
That does not mean pregnancy is the time for extreme workouts either.
The goal is consistent, moderate activity that supports the changing body instead of exhausting it.
Even simple walking can help circulation, pelvic mobility, mood, and energy levels. (Mottola et al. 2019)
Copying Workouts From Instagram Influencers

This is becoming more common pregnancy workout mistakes every year.
A pregnant woman sees a fitness influencer deadlifting heavily at 36 weeks or doing intense HIIT circuits and assumes she should do the same.
What social media rarely shows:
- the person’s medical background
- pelvic floor symptoms
- pain levels afterward
- pregnancy complications
- previous athletic history
- postpartum consequences
Pregnancy is not one-size-fits-all.
Some women tolerate impact well.
Others develop pelvic pressure after a short walk.
That difference matters.
A major problem with online prenatal fitness content is that it focuses too much on appearance and not enough on pressure management.
Many women do not realize the first sign of overload is often not pain.
It is:
- leaking urine
- heaviness in the pelvis
- abdominal bulging
- hip pressure
- difficulty recovering
Those signs should never be ignored.
Ignoring the Pelvic Floor Until Problems Start
Most women only hear about the pelvic floor after childbirth.
By then, symptoms may already be present.
The pelvic floor works constantly during pregnancy because it supports increasing weight from the uterus and baby.
It also works closely with breathing muscles and the deep core.
The Mistake Most Women Do Not Realize
One lesser-known issue physiotherapists now see more frequently is an overactive pelvic floor, not just a weak one.
Some women perform endless Kegels because they believe “more is better.”
But tight muscles that cannot relax properly can also contribute to:
- pelvic pain
- tailbone discomfort
- urinary urgency
- pain during intimacy
- difficulty relaxing during labor
Pelvic floor health is about coordination, not just squeezing.
Breath-Holding During Exercise
This is one of the biggest hidden exercise mistakes during pregnancy.
Many women unconsciously hold their breath during:
- squats
- lifting
- getting out of bed
- pushing movements
- carrying groceries
This dramatically increases pressure inside the abdomen.
When pressure repeatedly pushes downward without proper control, the pelvic floor and abdominal wall absorb that stress.
Over time, this may contribute to:
- pelvic heaviness
- worsening abdominal separation symptoms
- urinary leakage
- pressure discomfort
Why Breathing Matters More Than Most Women Think
One thing I explain often in clinic is that the core is not just “abs.”
The diaphragm, abdominal wall, spinal stabilizers, and pelvic floor all work together as a pressure system.
When breathing mechanics become poor, everything underneath starts compensating.
That is why modern physiotherapy focuses heavily on breathing quality during prenatal exercise.
Doing Aggressive Core Workouts
A lot of women panic about losing core strength during pregnancy and start doing more abdominal exercises.
Usually, this backfires, making it one of the biggest pregnancy workout mistakes
Pregnancy already stretches the abdominal wall significantly.
Exercises that create excessive outward pressure can overload tissues that are already under strain.
Common examples include:
- aggressive crunches
- intense planks
- double leg raises
- forceful twisting movements
Watch for Abdominal Coning
One sign I tell women to watch carefully is “coning” or “doming” of the abdomen.
If the belly pushes outward sharply during an exercise, it may indicate the body cannot manage the pressure efficiently.
That does not mean core training is dangerous.
It just means smarter core training matters more.
Better prenatal core work often includes:
- breathing drills
- side-lying stability exercises
- pelvic tilts
- controlled anti-rotation work
- deep core coordination exercises
Recent evidence also suggests that pressure management may influence diastasis recti symptoms more than simply trying to “close the gap.” (Pelvic Health Rehabilitation Center)
Treating Exhaustion Like Weakness
Pregnancy fatigue is different from normal tiredness.
The body is:
- growing a baby
- expanding blood volume
- changing hormone levels
- supporting placental development
- increasing metabolic demand
Yet many women feel guilty for slowing down.
Some continue pushing intense exercise despite:
- poor recovery
- dizziness
- elevated fatigue
- sleep disruption
- excessive soreness
That mindset usually comes from modern “bounce back” culture.
The truth is that pregnancy is not a performance phase.
It is a preparation phase.
There is a huge difference.
Sometimes the healthiest workout is the one you shorten instead of force yourself to finish.
Avoiding Strength Training Completely
This is one of the most common exercise mistakes women make during pregnancy
For years, many pregnant women were told to stick only to walking and light stretching.
Modern evidence no longer supports avoiding all resistance training.
Appropriately modified strength training can help support:
- posture
- joint stability
- functional strength
- labor endurance
- postpartum recovery
What Good Prenatal Strength Training Looks Like
The key word is modified.
During pregnancy, the body becomes more mobile because of hormonal changes.
Joint control becomes more important than simply lifting heavier.
Good prenatal strength training usually looks controlled, stable, and intentional.
Examples include:
- supported squats
- resistance band rows
- glute bridges
- wall push-ups
- step-ups
- supported lunges
Women are often surprised to learn that weak glutes contribute heavily to pregnancy-related pelvic and back discomfort.
Ignoring Rib Cage Changes
This is something most pregnancy blogs never discuss.
As the baby grows, the rib cage expands to create more space for breathing and organ movement.
This changes:
- breathing mechanics
- posture
- abdominal pressure patterns
Many women start breathing more through the upper chest without realizing it.
That shallow breathing pattern often increases:
- neck tension
- shoulder tightness
- rib discomfort
- stress response
Rib Mobility Matters Too
Physiotherapists frequently use rib mobility and diaphragmatic breathing work during pregnancy because breathing quality affects much more than oxygen intake.
It affects movement efficiency too.
Pushing Through Pelvic Pain
Women are often told pelvic pain is “normal.”
Common does not mean normal.
Pelvic girdle pain can make:
- walking painful
- turning in bed difficult
- stairs uncomfortable
- standing exhausting
Some women ignore symptoms for months because they think they are expected to tolerate them.
That delay often worsens movement compensation patterns.
Movement-based physiotherapy approaches have shown positive outcomes for pregnancy-related pelvic and low back pain.
Small Habits That Quietly Make Pelvic Pain Worse
One thing many women do not realize is that asymmetrical habits often aggravate pelvic discomfort:
- standing on one leg
- crossing legs repeatedly
- carrying weight on one side
- twisting while lifting
Small movement adjustments can sometimes reduce symptoms dramatically.
Doing Too Much High-Impact Exercise
Not every pregnant woman needs to stop running or jumping.
But not every body tolerates it well either.
The real issue is whether the body can manage the impact efficiently.
Signs impact may be too much include:
- urinary leakage
- pelvic dragging sensation
- hip pain
- lingering heaviness
- pubic bone pain
The Body Usually Gives Warnings Early
One mistake I see often is women waiting for severe pain before modifying exercise.
Usually, the body gives subtle warnings first.
The smartest athletes during pregnancy are often the ones who adapt early, not the ones who push hardest.
Comparing Pregnancy Fitness Journeys
This creates unnecessary pressure.
Some women remain highly active throughout pregnancy.
Others struggle with nausea, pelvic pain, fatigue, or medical complications.
Neither experience is “better.”
One of the worst things social media has done is make pregnant women feel they are failing if they are not constantly productive.
Movement should support the nervous system, not stress it further.
There are days during pregnancy when walking for 20 minutes is enough.
That still counts.
Forgetting That Postpartum Recovery Starts During Pregnancy
This is one of the biggest physiotherapy perspectives many people miss.
How you move during pregnancy often affects:
- postpartum recovery
- pelvic floor symptoms
- abdominal function
- back pain afterward
Pregnancy Training Is Really Preparation
Women who learn:
- pressure management
- breathing mechanics
- pelvic floor coordination
- movement control
during pregnancy often transition more smoothly postpartum.
Pregnancy training is not just about staying fit while pregnant.
It is preparation for what comes after birth too.
What Safe Prenatal Exercise Usually Looks Like
In most healthy pregnancies, safe exercise often includes:
- walking
- swimming
- prenatal Pilates
- modified strength training
- mobility work
- stationary cycling
- breathing exercises
The best prenatal workouts usually do not look extreme.
They look sustainable.
That matters more.
The current physical activity recommendations for pregnancy support regular moderate-intensity activity for most women without contraindications. (Davenport et al. 2018)
Small Signs Your Body May Need Exercise Modifications
Pay attention if you notice:
- pelvic heaviness
- urine leakage
- abdominal coning
- worsening back pain
- dizziness
- pressure in the pelvis
- unusual fatigue
- recovery taking longer than normal
These signs do not always mean “stop exercising forever.”
They often mean the body needs:
- reduced intensity
- exercise modifications
- better breathing mechanics
- more recovery
- professional guidance
Final Thoughts
Avoiding exercise mistakes during pregnancy can help improve comfort and movement safety.
Pregnancy exercise should never become a competition.
The goal is not proving how strong, disciplined, or productive you are while growing a baby.
The goal is supporting the body through one of the biggest physical transitions it will ever experience.
Some days that may mean strength training.
Other days it may simply mean stretching, breathing properly, and taking a walk.
That is still valuable movement.
The healthiest prenatal fitness approach is usually the one that respects the body instead of constantly trying to fight it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can pregnant women safely exercise every day?
Most women with healthy pregnancies can safely perform moderate daily movement such as walking, mobility work, prenatal Pilates, or light strength training after medical approval.
What exercise mistakes are most common during pregnancy?
Common mistakes include overtraining, breath-holding, ignoring pelvic floor symptoms, doing aggressive abdominal workouts, and following intense social media fitness routines without modifications.
Are planks and crunches safe during pregnancy?
Some women tolerate modified core exercises well, but aggressive abdominal movements may increase abdominal pressure and worsen coning or discomfort if not properly managed.
Can exercise help reduce pregnancy back pain?
Yes, physiotherapy-guided exercise, posture correction, breathing work, and strengthening exercises may help reduce pregnancy-related back and pelvic pain.
What are signs that a prenatal workout is too intense?
Pelvic heaviness, urine leakage, dizziness, severe fatigue, abdominal doming, or persistent soreness may indicate the workout needs modification.
Why is breathing important during pregnancy exercise?
Breathing affects abdominal pressure, pelvic floor coordination, posture, and movement control. Poor breathing mechanics may increase strain on the body during workouts.
Is strength training safe while pregnant?
Yes, properly modified strength training is considered safe for many pregnant women and may improve stability, posture, and functional strength.
Does prenatal exercise help postpartum recovery?
Learning breathing mechanics, pressure management, and proper movement during pregnancy may support smoother postpartum recovery and pelvic floor function.
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Medical Disclaimer!
This article has been reviewed and written under the guidance of our Head Physiotherapist, Dr. Kruti Raj (PT, MUHS,CPT,CMPT). The information shared is intended for educational purposes only and should not be considered a substitute for personalized medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.
Please consult us or any other qualified healthcare professional before beginning any exercise program, especially if you are experiencing pain, recovering from injury, or managing a medical condition.