ACL Physical Therapy in Bellingham, WA
ACL Rehab Is a Specialization — Not a Commodity
ACL rehabilitation is one of the most complex and high-stakes areas within physical therapy—and it should be treated that way.
One of the most common mistakes we see is this:
People spend significant time finding the right surgeon, then treat rehab as an afterthought. They choose what’s convenient. What’s covered by insurance. What’s familiar. But ACL recovery isn’t something to approach casually.
The quality of your rehabilitation directly influences:
Range of motion, strength, and symmetry
Movement mechanics
Confidence in cutting, jumping, and sport
Long-term durability and reinjury risk
This isn’t just about getting back to baseline. It’s about what your knee—and your body—will be capable of for the rest of your life.
Your choice of physical therapist matters more than most realize.
It’s not just part of the process—it defines the outcome. Don’t settle when it comes to your rehab.
Progressing in your rehab is not based on time but rather checking functional movement and strength boxes so you know when it’s smart and safe to advance in your rehab. There is a clear plan and understanding of the entire recovery, from pre-surgery to reintegrating back into sports.
We coach you every step of the way with criteria-based protocols
Phases of ACL Rehab
Prehab—Physical Therapy prior to surgery
Research shows this improves your surgical outcome. It looks like swelling management, restoring full range of motion, strength evaluation to accurately track your metrics before losing muscle so we can more efficiently guide your recovery, mitigating muscle loss through quad activation strategies and strengthening, as well as education for the phase immediately post-op.
Depending on age, activity demands, and symptoms, some individuals can avoid surgery (we call them ACL Copers). It requires a rigorous rehab program for several months to achieve the stability necessary to avoid surgery if that choice makes the most sense for you.
Early Post-Op Phase—lays the foundation upon which success is built
Doing the basics well yields greater outcomes:
Restore Full Knee Extension
Quad Recruitment
Swelling Management
Load Management
Restore Normal Walking Mechanics
Restore Knee Bending
Removing Quadriceps inhibition is the goal. If the joint is swollen, painful, and lacks end range extension, the quad can’t fire optimally, and progress can’t be made. Inadequate coaching here will quickly derail someone for months. Many of our clients tell us they wish they had started with us—and we tend to feel the same. The process is simply smoother when we’re able to guide the entire rehab from start to finish.
Mid Stage Phase—The Rebuild
This is where you work out hard, lift a lot of weight, put on muscle, and restore limb symmetry. We formally assess and address any ankle, hip, and back issues. We track your quad and hamstring strength as you improve. We adjust strength programming depending on your graft site and your metrics. It’s a long grind. Burnout can happen. It’s common. We’re here for you to help you keep pushing!
We teach you ways to force the quad to do its job. You work toward deeper knee angles with squats and lunges. We work on deceleration control and prepare you for jumping and running.
Mid / Late Stage—Return to Jumping and Running
Once adequate strength is developed and knee crankiness is managed, and we check all of the movement quality boxes, we work through jump progressions. Once someone can demonstrate adequate control of repeated single leg jumps with good force absorption, they are ready to restore running. Many do so too soon due to inadequate coaching, and their rehab often falls apart here in addition to the early phase.
Return to Sport Phase—Reintegration into cutting and change of direction, reacting, impact control, continued progressive muscle growth and power training, and sport-specific movements. If returning to a sport, graded exposure is recommended.
Maintenance Phase —Strength and ACL Prevention Program to mitigate risk of reinjury.
