Adductor tendinopathy physiotherapy in Melbourne should do more than prescribe rest. Groin pain often persists because the real driver is missed.
Pain keeps returning. Training feels risky. Hip and groin movement starts to feel limited and unreliable.
At The Alignment Studio, we treat adductor tendinopathy by addressing how your body moves and manages load, not just where it hurts.
We begin with a comprehensive assessment of the hip, pelvis, and movement patterns to identify the underlying cause of the tendon’s overload. From there, we build a personalised rehabilitation program to reduce pain and restore strength.
Our experienced physios in Melbourne CBD use exercise-based rehabilitation, targeted manual therapy, and Pilates-based training. The goal is better movement, stronger support from surrounding muscles, and sustainable recovery for work, sport, and daily life.
Adductor tendinopathy is rarely just a tendon issue. It is often a problem of movement inefficiency and load control. Adductor tendinopathy is common in sports that involve cutting, changing direction, and kicking.
The adductor muscles stabilise the hip, pelvis, and inner thigh during walking, running, and sport. When alignment drops, these muscles absorb excess force.
The tendons most often involved are the adductor longus, adductor brevis, and adductor magnus. These structures manage force during hip flexion, cutting, and direction change.
Poor pelvic position, limited hip control, and reduced abdominal muscle support increase tendon stress. Over time, repeated overload leads to adductor tendinopathy.
This differs from adductor muscle strains or an acute groin strain. Strains are sudden injuries. Tendinopathy develops gradually through repeated loading errors.
At The Alignment Studio, we correct how force travels through the hip and pelvis so the tendon can recover properly.
Symptoms of adductor tendinopathy may include groin pain, muscle spasms, swelling, and difficulty moving the affected leg.
Other common signs include:
Pain often increases during hip flexion or change of direction. Single-leg tasks may feel weak or unstable.
These symptoms usually reflect poor control at the hip, pelvis, and knee. When alignment fails, the adductor tendon absorbs excess load, and the injury persists.
Adductor tendinopathy often recurs because movement faults remain uncorrected. Rest may reduce pain in the short term, but it does not change how force is shared.
Common contributors include:

Overuse without correcting movement patterns

Poor load sharing between the hip flexors, adductors, and abdominal muscles

Compensation from the surrounding muscles in the hip and thigh

Sport-specific patterns that overload the tendon
Sports involving kicking, cutting, and sprinting repeatedly stress the groin. Without biomechanical correction, the risk of reinjury stays high.
This is why rest alone rarely leads to sustainable recovery. Proper warm-up, strengthening exercises, and maintaining flexibility can help prevent future adductor injuries.

Screening of the hip, pelvis, and lower limb

Posture and movement pattern analysis

Review of sport, work, and daily demands

Clear explanation of symptoms and injury drivers
Treatment is then tailored to your needs.
Manual therapy includes soft tissue massage and joint mobilisation to reduce pain and improve flexibility in treating adductor tendinopathy. Advanced modalities like our shockwave therapy (ESWT) may be used for chronic cases that do not respond to exercise rehabilitation.
The focus remains clear. Treat the cause. Support long-term recovery.
Recovery time for adductor injuries varies, with mild strains healing in a few weeks and severe strains taking several months.
General timelines:

Mild adductor injury: a few weeks

Persistent tendinopathy: progressive loading over time

Recurrent cases: slower progress with stricter control
Return to sport is based on movement criteria, not guesswork.
We progress:






Yes. Poor hip and pelvis control increases adductor load.
Groin pain does not need to control your movement. At The Alignment Studio, the right assessment changes outcomes.
If you are dealing with adductor tendinopathy, groin injury, or repeated flare-ups, now is the time to act.