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Knee surgery PT wardrobe — what to wear that won’t get in the way of bending

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Post-surgery · Knee surgery PT wardrobe

A practical wardrobe guide for the 4-12 weeks of physical therapy after knee replacement, ACL reconstruction, or major knee surgery — when bending the knee progressively further is the entire point of the session, and the wrong clothing actively works against you. Sourced from AAOS rehab guidance and consistent themes in PT-clinic patient feedback.

The simple answer

PT after knee surgery requires the operative knee to bend, straighten, and be hands-on accessible — your therapist needs to see and palpate the joint. The wardrobe that works: loose shorts that hit above the knee, no leggings (compress and obscure), athletic socks that can be pulled up easily, slip-on shoes for the parking lot, and a layering top that’s easy on/off. Bring a water bottle and a small towel. Below: each piece in detail, plus what most patients change after their first PT session.

Why the wardrobe matters in PT

Per AAOS’s knee rehab guidance, the goal of PT for the first 4-8 weeks is restoring range of motion (typically 0-120 degrees of flexion) and rebuilding quad strength. The therapist needs to: see the knee from all angles, measure flexion and extension with a goniometer, palpate for swelling and warmth, push the knee into deeper bends manually, and apply ice or e-stim. Pants that won’t roll up past the knee, jeans, leggings — all actively prevent these things. Shorts solve the problem entirely.

The shorts question

The single most important piece

Athletic shorts that hit 4-6 inches above the knee, with elastic waist

Above-knee length means the therapist can fully access the joint. Elastic waist means no buttons or zippers; you can pull on/off in the locker room without sitting. Mid-thigh length is ideal — long basketball shorts catch on equipment, and very short running shorts feel exposing during therapy. Cost: $15-30 each, 2-3 pairs covers the PT phase. Many patients describe the right shorts as “the most-used clothing item of the entire recovery.”

What NOT to wear

  • Leggings. Compress the operative knee. Hide swelling. Therapist can’t measure or palpate.
  • Sweatpants with cuffed ankles. Bunched fabric at the knee actively interferes with flexion exercises.
  • Jeans, of any cut. Won’t roll up past the knee; not stretchable enough.
  • Pants you can’t change at the clinic. Many PT clinics have you change into shorts on arrival; lugging fully-changed pants is awkward.
  • Compression socks above the knee. Discuss with your surgeon — some are prescribed; tight non-prescribed compression can compromise circulation.

Top half

Layering matters

T-shirt + light jacket or quarter-zip pullover

PT clinics are often air-conditioned; the parking lot is hot or cold; the actual exercise gets you sweating in 10 minutes. A layered system that’s easy on and off: a fitted t-shirt (so it doesn’t catch on equipment) and a light jacket or quarter-zip you can take off in 10 seconds. Avoid heavy hoodies that bunch.

Footwear

For walking and balance work

Lace-up athletic shoes (pre-tied) OR proper slip-on running shoes

PT involves walking, balance work on a foam pad, and stationary cycling. You need actual support; flip-flops and casual slip-ons don’t cut it. If bending past the operative knee to tie laces is still painful (weeks 1-3), pre-tie laces and slip in. By week 4-6 most patients can tie shoes again. Avoid: backless shoes, sandals, anything heeled.

“My PT pulled out a goniometer at minute 5 of my first session. I was wearing leggings. She asked me to pull them up. They wouldn’t go past my knee. I went home and bought 4 pairs of shorts that night.”
— composite of recurring PT-clinic feedback

The PT clinic carry-in

Item Why
Water bottle Hydration matters; PT clinic fountains are crowded
Small towel For sweat; some patients also use to drape the knee between exercises
Pain medication (if any) Some patients dose 30 min before PT; ask your surgeon
Insurance card + ID For check-in
Phone with goniometer-app or notes Many patients track their own ROM progress
Slip-on shoes for the locker room If you change into PT shoes

The post-PT shower

Most patients prefer to shower at home after PT, not at the clinic. The drive home is when soreness sets in; ice the knee on arrival, then shower seated on a stool. Some PTs finish with cold therapy — bring an extra t-shirt if your top gets wet from ice packs.

What we make for PT

The post-surgery collection includes pull-on shorts and pants designed for the PT phase — easy on/off, knee-accessible, no buttons. Many patients describe the right 2-3 pairs as the wardrobe staple of weeks 2-12.

FAQ

How often will I have PT?
Typically 2-3 times per week for 6-12 weeks, plus daily home exercises. Frequency tapers as ROM and strength return.
Can I exercise on PT off-days?
Yes — you’ll be given a home exercise program. Same wardrobe principles apply: shorts, layering, water.
When can I switch back to leggings?
Once PT is done (week 8-12) and your therapist no longer needs to access the knee. Many patients keep wearing shorts at PT through the entire course because it’s easier.
What about aquatic PT?
If your clinic has it: you’ll need a swimsuit. Same principle — easy access to the operative knee. Two-piece swimsuits or shorts + rash guard work for any gender.

Sources

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By the Inspired Comforts editorial team. About us.
A note on what this is. This article is general information drawn from the sources cited above and from real-patient experience patterns. It is not medical advice, not a diagnosis, and not a substitute for the guidance of your care team. Your situation is specific to you. Always discuss decisions about your treatment, medications, and care with your physician, surgeon, oncologist, nephrologist, OB, or relevant specialist. If you are experiencing symptoms that worry you, contact your medical team. In an emergency, call 911 or your local emergency number.
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