Last Updated:
January 30th, 2026
Physical health therapy
Physical health therapy in addiction recovery works on fixing the damage drugs and alcohol cause to your body. Years of substance use can cause huge harm to your physical health, but physical health therapy can help strengthen your body, improve your sleep, fix nutrition problems, and get you moving comfortably again. The goal is repairing the damage of addiction and getting your body working properly again, which can have huge benefits for recovery.

What is physical health therapy for addiction?
Physical health therapy addresses the physical damage substance use causes. A therapist or exercise specialist assesses the damage and creates a personal plan to fix it. Most rehab programmes include some physical health components. There are various possible approaches, but most will focus on sleep, nutrition, and movement.
How does addiction damage physical health?
Substance addiction can affect your immune system, muscles, bones, and sexual function. Some of the biggest harms are caused by:
What do physical health therapy sessions involve?
Every physical health therapy programme will differ a little, but the best approach is part of a complete treatment programme. This may include:
Your team will also check your heart rate, blood pressure, flexibility, and strength to decide what you can do safely in early sessions. Your plans can adapt as you get fitter, and this is a great way to gauge progress and build confidence.
Common activities for people in recovery include walking, swimming, yoga, weights, cycling, and team sports. Gentler options like tai chi or stretching can be great if you are starting from a low fitness level, but just the fact that you are exercising regularly is far more important than the activity itself.
What are the benefits of physical health therapy?
Physical health therapy can benefit you both during alcohol and drug rehab and in the years after leaving treatment. Regular exercise rebuilds strength, improves heart and lung function, rebuilds muscles, normalises weight, improves sleep, and increases energy. These physical changes make daily life easier and also make you feel more confident. This is important because drug and alcohol addiction can badly affect self-esteem.
Scheduled exercise also gives structure to empty days, as having a fitness class to attend or a workout routine to complete provides purpose. This structure is particularly useful post-treatment when you may have a lot of free time that used to be taken up by drinking or taking drugs.
Who can benefit most from physical health therapy?
Physical health therapy can benefit everyone in recovery, but it is especially helpful if you:
- Are severely weakened from substance use
- Have sleep problems that medication hasn’t fixed
- Struggle with depression or anxiety
- Need more structure in your days
- Find talk therapy on its own is not enough
- Have gained or lost significant weight
- Want to rebuild confidence in your body
How to maintain physical health after treatment?
The habits you build during your stay in rehab need to continue for sustained recovery. Some of the best ways to keep those habits going include:
Next steps
If you want treatment that takes physical recovery seriously, look for programmes with thorough physical health therapy. Recovery.org can help you find rehab treatment that makes sustainable recovery easier. Contact us today to talk about your options.

