Scroll for five minutes and you'll find someone telling you Kegels are a waste of time: that bridges, squats and breathing work run circles around them. It's a real shift in the conversation, and brushing it off would be a mistake. So let's be straight: where are the critics right, and where do Kegels still earn their keep?
Where the critics have a point
Fair criticisms
- Mindless clenching doesn't do much: a muscle has to lift, release, and work through real movement.
- Done wrong, by bearing down, they can actually backfire.
- They're not for everyone: a tight, overactive floor needs release, not more squeezing.
- In isolation they're not magic: the pelvic floor works with your breath, deep core and hips.
Where they still earn it
- The method is evidence-based: pelvic floor training is a recommended first-line step for many leaks.
- For postpartum, stress leaks, and after prostate surgery, it's foundational.
- You learn to find and control the muscle first, before layering on movement.
- Done correctly and kept up, it genuinely helps a lot of people.
The real problem isn't Kegels. It's bad Kegels.
Look closely at the criticisms and they're almost all about how people do them: no release, the wrong muscle, no consistency, or the wrong person doing them at all. None of that is an argument against training the pelvic floor. It's an argument against training it badly. Fix the how, and most of the case against Kegels quietly falls apart.
So the honest verdict is somewhere in the middle. "Just clench a hundred times a day" deserves the eye-roll it gets. A correct lift, a real release, done consistently, by someone it actually suits? Still one of the most effective, accessible things going.
Built for the version that works.
Kegelia exists for the "done right" Kegel, not the mindless one. It paces the lift and the release, buzzes on the lift so the rep is correct, and keeps it to one forgiving minute so you actually keep going. And it won't pretend it's for everyone: if your floor is tight rather than weak, that's a job for release work and a specialist, not more squeezing.
So, should you do them?
If you're dealing with the kind of leak that shows up when you sneeze, laugh or run, or you're rebuilding after birth, correct pelvic floor training is a sound first step, ideally as part of a fuller picture that includes breath, core and movement over time. If you've got pain or tightness, skip the squeezing and get assessed. And if you've been clenching away for months with nothing to show for it, the answer probably isn't "more reps." It's checking your technique.