
Are you tired of feeling pain that stops you from doing what you love? Many people of all ages deal with this problem. It often comes from imbalances in the body. At Liv Hospital, we think lasting relief needs more than quick fixes.
Our team uses proven methods to find the real reasons behind your hip muscle pain. We focus on making your lower back and pelvis stable. This helps you get back to living your best life. We’re here to guide you through a four-week plan to fix your physical issues.
We follow the latest 2025 guidelines to give you top-notch care. We’re all about helping you get back to enjoying life without pain or worry.
Key Takeaways
- Understand the root causes of your physical discomfort.
- Follow a structured four-week recovery plan.
- Benefit from evidence-based, patient-centered care.
- Improve stability in your lower back and pelvis.
- Regain your mobility and return to daily activities.
Understanding the Root Causes of Hip Muscle Pain

Often, the source of your pain is in how your body moves every day. When you have hip muscle pain, it’s not just a spot issue. It shows your body’s movement chain has broken down.
Rest alone doesn’t fix it because it doesn’t fix the mechanical problems. To heal, we must see how muscles work together and find where they go wrong. Understanding these hidden triggers is the first step toward lasting recovery.
The Prevalence of Hip Dysfunction
Hip dysfunction affects both top athletes and regular people. Soft tissue injuries, like adductor strains, are common in sports. They make up 23% of muscle injuries in European football players and 9% to 18% of all sports injuries.
This shows the hip joint is prone to stress if movement is off. Seeing so many injuries, we know hip imbalance plays a big role. By understanding this, we can help your body handle daily and physical activities better.
The Role of Muscle Imbalance and Compensatory Patterns
When muscles like the gluteus medius weaken, the body finds ways to keep moving. This leads to other muscles working too hard. Over time, this puts abnormal stress on the hip and nearby tissues, causing long-term pain.
Also, a lower back muscle imbalance often ties into hip problems. If your core and lower back aren’t aligned, your hips have to work harder. This can lead to a muscle imbalance lower back scenario, causing pain to spread. Fixing this hip imbalance needs a detailed plan to strengthen and stabilize the pelvic area.
A Four-Week Protocol to Fix Hip Muscle Pain

Our team created this four-week plan to help you move from pain to strength. We think that consistent, targeted movement is the best way to fix hip muscle pain. By sticking to this plan, your body gets stronger and more flexible for everyday tasks.
Week One: Establishing Stability and Mobility
The first week is all about getting your joints ready. We start with gentle exercises to loosen tight spots, like the hip flexors. Building a strong base is key before we add more challenging exercises.
Week Two: Strengthening the Gluteus Medius and Adductors
When you’re more mobile, we focus on strengthening. We target the gluteus medius and adductors, which are key for your pelvis stability. These muscles are vital for walking and standing.
Week Three: Integrating Lower Back and Core Alignment
Looking beyond the hip is important for lasting results. Many lower back issues come from poor pelvic alignment. By adding core exercises, we help fix these imbalances and reduce pain.
Week Four: Functional Movement and Long-Term Maintenance
In the last week, we move to more complex, real-life movements. This phase makes sure your muscle balance helps you in daily life. We encourage you to keep up these habits to stay healthy and avoid future pain.
Conclusion
Committing to movement and strengthening for four weeks can help you beat hip muscle pain. You have the power to make your daily life more comfortable. This is by doing exercises regularly and with purpose.
Keeping your muscles in balance is key to lasting relief. Fixing how you move helps protect your joints. It also makes your life better overall.
Think of this plan as the beginning of a lifelong journey to better health. Small, daily habits are the start of a body that moves easily and strongly.
If pain doesn’t go away, our team at Medical organization is here to help. Contact our specialists to talk about your recovery. We want to help you succeed in the long run.
FAQ
Can hip muscle pain really be resolved in just four weeks?
Sometimes, yes—but it depends on the cause and severity.
- Mild muscle strain or imbalance: often improves significantly within 2–4 weeks
- Chronic overuse or long-standing imbalance: may take longer (6–12+ weeks)
- Structural joint problems: usually need longer-term management
A 4-week plan is typically aimed at reducing pain, restoring movement, and correcting basic muscle function, not fully “resetting” long-term biomechanics in every case.
How does a muscle imbalance in the lower back contribute to hip pain?
The lower back and hips work as a connected movement system. When muscles are imbalanced:
- Some muscles become tight (e.g., hip flexors, lower back muscles)
-
Others become weak (e.g., glutes, core stabilizers)
This leads to altered movement patterns, placing extra stress on the hip joint and surrounding tendons, which can cause pain.
What exactly is a hip imbalance and how do we identify it?
A hip imbalance means one side of the hip system is stronger, tighter, or more active than the other, or certain muscle groups are not working in harmony.
Common signs include:
- One hip feels tighter or weaker than the other
- Uneven gait or posture
- Pain during walking, squatting, or climbing stairs
- Recurrent strains or stiffness in the same area
Clinicians often identify it through movement tests, strength assessment, and posture evaluation.
Why is maintaining muscle balance essential for preventing adductor strain?
The adductor muscles (inner thigh) stabilize the pelvis during movement. If surrounding muscles are imbalanced:
- The adductors are forced to overcompensate
-
This increases risk of strain or overload
Balanced strength between the core, glutes, and hip muscles reduces stress on the adductors and prevents injury recurrence.
Is rest enough to fix a lower back muscle imbalance affecting the hips?
No. Rest may reduce pain temporarily, but it does not correct imbalance.
To fully address the issue, you usually need:
- Targeted strengthening (especially glutes and core)
- Mobility work for tight muscles
-
Gradual return to movement
Without rehabilitation, symptoms often return once activity resumes.
What is the focus of the final stage of the four-week recovery journey?
The final stage typically focuses on:
- Restoring full strength and stability
- Rebuilding functional movement (walking, squatting, daily tasks)
- Preventing recurrence through balanced muscle control
- Gradual return to normal or sport-specific activity
The goal is not just pain relief, but long-term joint and muscle resilience so the problem does not return easily.
References
National Center for Biotechnology Information. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31015258/