Recovery education
Knee Replacement Recovery Timeline
A general week-by-week educational guide to recovery after total knee replacement (TKA). Recovery varies by patient, surgical technique, prior conditioning, and adherence to physical therapy. This is educational only and does not replace your surgeon's individualized recovery plan.
Educational content only. Not medical advice. Individual evaluation by a qualified orthopedic specialist is required.
Day 0–3 (Hospital)
- Standing and assisted walking with a walker, often the same day
- Pain managed with multimodal protocol (per AAHKS guidance)
- DVT prophylaxis started; ankle pumps and breathing exercises
- Initial range-of-motion exercises; typical discharge 1–3 days
Week 1–2 (Early home recovery)
- Walker or crutches; short, frequent walks several times daily
- Home or outpatient PT begins; goal ~90° flexion by end of week 2
- Ice, elevation, and incision care; watch for infection signs
- Most patients off opioids by 2–4 weeks (AAOS/AAHKS opioid stewardship)
Week 3–6 (Mobility phase)
- Transition from walker to cane as gait normalizes
- Target ≥110–120° flexion and full extension by week 6
- Many patients resume driving 4–6 weeks after right TKA if off narcotics
- Desk-based return to work commonly 4–6 weeks
Week 6–12 (Strengthening phase)
- Progressive resistance, balance, and stationary cycling
- Stair training without rail; longer community walking
- Swelling continues to decrease but may persist for months
- Return to low-impact recreation (walking, cycling, swimming, golf)
Month 3–6 (Functional return)
- Most patients reach the majority of their final function by 3–6 months
- Pain and stiffness continue to improve gradually
- Discuss higher-impact activities with your surgeon individually
Month 6–12+ (Long-term outcome)
- Continued small gains in strength and endurance up to 12 months
- Annual follow-up and periodic radiographs as advised
- Lifelong awareness of infection and implant-related symptoms
Common Symptoms
Symptoms can have multiple causes. The following are examples that patients commonly describe and that may warrant orthopedic evaluation.
- Fever, chills, or wound drainage (possible infection — see MSIS criteria)
- Sudden calf pain, swelling, or shortness of breath (possible DVT/PE)
- Severe, worsening pain not controlled by your plan
- New mechanical symptoms — giving way, locking, instability
- Inability to bear weight or new deformity
Treatment Pathways
Treatment depends on diagnosis. Not every patient needs surgery. Options may include:
- Range of motion: ~90° flexion by week 2, ~110–120° by week 6, with full extension
- Strengthening: quadriceps activation from day 1; progressive resistance drives gains through months 2–4
- Gait & balance: assistive devices stepped down as quadriceps control improves
- Return to activity: low-impact generally encouraged; high-impact decisions are individualized
Treatment options depend on diagnosis, and consultation with a qualified orthopedic specialist is required.
Risks & Limitations
All orthopedic procedures carry risks. Educational examples include:
- Pre-operative deconditioning or limited range of motion
- Diabetes, obesity, smoking, or poor nutrition
- Inadequate PT adherence or under-dosed rehab
- Complications: infection, stiffness, component issues, DVT
- Unrealistic expectations — full recovery commonly takes 6–12 months
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does it take to fully recover from a knee replacement?
Most patients reach the majority of their function by 3–6 months, with continued improvement up to 12 months. Individual recovery varies.
When can I drive after knee replacement?
Many patients resume driving 4–6 weeks after a right-knee TKA once off opioids and with adequate reaction time. Left-knee TKA in an automatic vehicle is often sooner. Confirm with your surgeon.
When can I return to work?
Sedentary work commonly resumes around 4–6 weeks. Standing or physically demanding work may require 3 months or more.
How much knee bend should I have at 6 weeks?
A common target is 110–120° of flexion with full extension by 6 weeks. Persistent stiffness should be discussed with your surgeon.
What is the fastest recovery from knee replacement?
Recovery cannot be safely rushed. Adherence to PT, pain control, swelling management, and gradual progression yield the best outcomes.
When should I request a second opinion during recovery?
Consider a second opinion for persistent unexplained pain past 3–6 months, suspected infection, instability, stiffness not responding to therapy, or any recommendation for revision surgery.
References
References
- AAOS OrthoInfo — Total Knee Replacement
- AAOS OrthoInfo — Total Hip Replacement
- AAOS OrthoInfo — Revision Total Knee Replacement
- AAOS OrthoInfo — Revision Total Hip Replacement
- AAOS OrthoInfo — Knee Arthroscopy
- AAOS OrthoInfo — Hip Arthroscopy
- AAOS OrthoInfo — Joint Replacement Infection
- AAHKS Patient Education
- PubMed
- National Institutes of Health
Medical Review
Medical Review
This educational content has been medically reviewed for accuracy and completeness.
Reviewed by
Dr. Aureliano Mateus García, MD
Board Certified Orthopedic Surgeon · Joint Reconstruction · Hip & Knee Replacement · Arthroscopy · Sports Medicine
Dr. Aureliano Mateus García is an orthopedic surgeon specializing in joint reconstruction, arthroscopy, sports medicine, and hip and knee replacement surgery. His clinical practice focuses on patients with degenerative joint disease, sports-related injuries, meniscal pathology, ligament injuries, hip disorders, and advanced arthritis requiring joint replacement. Dr. Mateus combines minimally invasive orthopedic techniques with evidence-based treatment pathways designed to improve mobility, reduce pain, and accelerate recovery whenever possible.
Areas of Interest
- Knee Replacement Surgery
- Hip Replacement Surgery
- Revision Joint Surgery
- Knee Arthroscopy
- Hip Arthroscopy
- ACL Reconstruction
The purpose of this review is to ensure educational accuracy and consistency with current orthopedic literature and professional society recommendations. Medical review does not create a physician-patient relationship.
Last Reviewed: June 2026
Facility Information
Hospital CYNTAR
Orthopedic procedures discussed on this website may be performed at Hospital CYNTAR in Tijuana, Mexico. Hospital CYNTAR is a multidisciplinary specialty hospital serving domestic and international patients, and is part of the same institutional group as Obesity Control Center and The Ariel Center for Cosmetic Surgery.
Advanced orthopedic surgery suites
On-site ICU with 24/7 patient monitoring
Digital imaging services (X-ray, CT, MRI on-site or coordinated)
Arthroscopy equipment
Joint replacement technology
Physical therapy and rehabilitation resources
Dedicated US patient coordinators and translators
20+ years of specialty surgical experience at the same facility
Short flight to San Diego with coordinated border transfer
Perioperative care teams
Availability of specific technologies, services, and physicians may vary.
Institutional Track Record
Host Facility — Verified Surgical Track Record
Hospital CYNTAR is part of an institutional group with a long-standing international surgical track record. The metrics below reflect the affiliated bariatric surgery program at Obesity Control Center operating within the same hospital group — they demonstrate institutional volume, accreditation, and safety culture, and are not orthopedic outcomes.
30,000+
Procedures performed (bariatric program)
19,801
Patients in ASMBS published outcomes study
1.2%
30-day morbidity (published series)
0
Mortalities reported (published series)
2010
SRC Center of Excellence since
These metrics describe the host facility's bariatric program (Obesity Control Center) and demonstrate institutional safety culture. They do not represent outcomes for hip or knee surgery. Individual orthopedic results vary.
Hospital Standards & Accreditation
Hospital Standards & Accreditation
When evaluating orthopedic treatment programs, patients often review facility accreditation, safety protocols, infection prevention programs, quality reporting, and rehabilitation support. Hospital CYNTAR is Joint Commission International (JCI) accredited — the gold standard for international hospital quality and patient safety — and the same institutional group additionally holds SRC Center of Excellence and Global Healthcare Accreditation designations through its affiliated bariatric program at Obesity Control Center.
Hospital CYNTAR's JCI accreditation can be independently verified using the link above. SRC Center of Excellence and Global Healthcare Accreditation are held by the affiliated Obesity Control Center program operating within the same hospital group.
Speak With An Educational Coordinator
Educational coordinators can help explain pathways and answer general questions. This is not medical advice.
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