Best Positions for Early, Active, and Pushing Phases of Labor
There’s a reason birth educators and pelvic floor therapists talk so much about movement: labor is physical. And the position you choose can influence:
- Comfort (pressure, back labor, hip/pelvic pain)
- Energy conservation (so you don’t burn out early)
- Pelvic mechanics (how the pelvis opens in different ways)
- Baby’s ability to rotate and descend
- Your ability to relax the pelvic floor when it matters most
Here’s the key: there isn’t one “best” labor position. There’s a best position for you in that moment. Your goal is to match the position to the phase of labor you’re in.
Below are our go-to options for the early phase, active phase, and pushing phase, plus cues for when to switch.
Phase 1: Early Labor Positions
Early labor goal: Rest, soften, conserve energy, and keep baby moving gradually.
What early labor positions should do
- Support rest between contractions
- Reduce tension in the jaw, ribs, hips, glutes, and pelvic floor
- Allow gentle movement without draining you
Best early labor positions to try
1) Side-lying (rest + recovery)
Helpful for: conserving energy, reducing pelvic floor clenching
How to set up:
- Pillow between knees; optional pillow behind your back
- Keep jaw and shoulders relaxed
- During contractions: inhale into ribs, long slow exhale
2) Supported forward-lean (counter/bed/partner)
Helpful for: easing back pressure, encouraging pelvic floor lengthening
How to do it:
- Lean into support with soft knees
- Let belly hang, drop shoulders
- Add gentle sway or hip circles
3) Birth ball sitting + circles
Helpful for: mobility with low effort, rhythmic coping
How to do it:
- Feet wide and grounded
- Circle hips or rock side-to-side
- Keep face soft and breathe steady
4) Hands-and-knees rocking
Helpful for: pressure relief, baby rotation support
How to do it:
- Hands under shoulders, knees under hips
- Rock hips back toward heels, then forward
- Relax neck and breathe wide into ribs
Phase 2: Active Labor Positions
Active labor goal: Cope with intensity, stay supported, and create space for baby to descend and rotate.
What active labor positions should do
- Provide support + stability
- Encourage pelvic opening (symmetrical and asymmetrical)
- Offer options for back labor
- Help prevent burnout through position rotation
Best active labor positions to try
1) Standing sway (“slow dance”) with partner
Helpful for: gravity, rhythm, grounding
- Knees bent, hips heavy
- Sway side-to-side or in small circles
- Try firm hip/low-back pressure if it helps
2) Asymmetrical lunge (one foot up)
Helpful for: targeted pelvic opening + rotation support
- One foot on step/stool/curb
- Stay tall or slightly forward
- Switch sides every few contractions
3) Supported kneeling (upright or leaning forward)
Helpful for: tailbone relief + steady breathing
- Kneel on pillow/blanket
- Hug pillows on the bed or lean into partner support
- Keep hips heavy, thighs relaxed
4) Supported squat (use as a tool)
Helpful for: opening the pelvic outlet + gravity
- Hold a stable surface/partner support
- Use for 1–3 contractions, then switch to conserve energy
- Keep knees wide
5) Toilet sitting
Helpful for: pelvic floor relaxation and outlet opening
- Feet supported
- Lean forward slightly, relax your jaw
- Follow provider guidance for your situation/monitoring needs
Phase 3: Pushing Positions
Pushing goal: Make space at the pelvic outlet, coordinate breath and pelvic floor, and protect tissues.
Best pushing positions to try
1) Side-lying pushing (controlled + tissue-friendly)
- Support top leg with pillows or partner support
- Think “long exhale, soften, open” instead of forcing
2) Hands-and-knees pushing
- Pillow under knees/wrists
- Hips heavy and wide
- Rest chest on pillows between pushes if needed
3) Supported squat / birth stool
- Use squat bar/partner support/stool
- Between pushes: relax face, shoulders, pelvic floor
- Switch out if legs fatigue quickly
4) Upright supported “throne” or kneeling
- Sit upright supported by pillows, knees wide
- Or kneel upright / lean forward with support
If you have an epidural
Depending on safety/monitoring, many people can still use options like side-lying, upright supported “throne,” and (sometimes) assisted hands-and-knees. Your nurse/provider will guide what’s appropriate.
A simple position practice plan (10–12 minutes)
Practice 2–3x/week in late pregnancy (as cleared by your provider). Familiarity is the goal.
- 3 minutes: Birth ball circles + long exhales
- 2 minutes: Supported forward-lean sway
- 2 minutes: Hands-and-knees rocking
- 2 minutes: Side-lying relaxation breathing
- 1 minute each side: Supported lunge
Breath cue: Relax your jaw on the exhale. A soft face often supports a soft pelvic floor.
How pelvic floor therapy helps with labor positions (and recovery)
A Birth Preparation visit helps you connect mobility, breathing, pelvic floor relaxation, so you’re not learning it mid-contraction.
We will teach you:
- Hip and pelvic mobility for easier position changes
- How to reduce pelvic floor tension/clenching
- Breathing patterns for labor and pushing coordination
- Early postpartum recovery guidelines
If you live in Central Texas, Book a Birth Preparation Appointment
Want a personalized plan built around your body, comfort, and birth preferences?
Strength & Dignity Wellness offers Birth Preparation appointments in:
Belton, Cedar Park, and Georgetown, TX
Book here
Not local or prefer online support?
Join our self-paced, online program: Raise With Strength – Release for Labor
Need a checklist for your go-bag?
Download our free guide: Labor Positions Checklist
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