Scoliosis — a sideways curvature of the spine, often with an element of rotation — raises an understandable question the moment you start exercising: what shouldn’t I do? It’s a sensible instinct, because an asymmetric spine doesn’t respond to exercise the way a straight one does, and some movements can reinforce or aggravate a curve. But I want to frame this carefully, because the bigger risk for most people isn’t doing the “wrong” exercise — it’s doing nothing out of fear. The right exercise is genuinely beneficial for scoliosis. The job is to know which movements warrant caution, modify them intelligently, and put your energy into the work that helps.
Key takeaway: With scoliosis, approach repetitive end-range backbends, heavy overhead loading, high-impact sport, and unguided heavy spinal rotation with caution — but don’t stop exercising. Targeted, curve-specific strengthening and breathing work is highly beneficial. Because scoliosis is individual, what to avoid depends on your specific curve, so professional guidance matters.
With scoliosis, generally approach with caution: repetitive end-range backbends, heavy overhead lifting, high-impact and contact activities, and heavy, unguided spinal rotation or side-bending that deepens the curve. These can aggravate an asymmetric, rotated spine. Far more important is doing the right work — curve-specific core stability, postural strengthening, and breathing into the concave side. Sophie Mercer, PMA-certified clinical Pilates instructor, designed a 10-week Scoliosis Management protocol of 36 exercises that build balanced strength and control around your spine.
What exercises should you approach with caution?
These are the categories that most often warrant modification with scoliosis. None is universally banned, but each deserves thought:
- Repetitive end-range backbends — deep, forceful spinal extension can stress an already asymmetric spine, particularly where there’s rotation.
- Heavy overhead loading — pressing heavy weights overhead loads the spine in ways a curve may not distribute evenly.
- High-impact and contact activities — repetitive jarring or collision risk, especially during growth or with a significant curve.
- Heavy, unguided rotation or side-bending — these can deepen rather than balance a curve when done without attention to which direction helps yours.
The crucial nuance: scoliosis is individual. A movement that’s fine for one person’s curve can aggravate another’s. This is exactly why blanket internet lists only go so far, and why an assessment of your curve is worth so much.
What should you do instead?
This is the more useful question. The exercise that helps scoliosis is targeted and asymmetric — it treats the two sides of your body differently, because your spine does. The principles behind established approaches like the Schroth method centre on:
- Core and postural strengthening to support and stabilise the spine
- Lengthening and de-rotating work specific to your curve pattern
- Breathing into the concave side of the curve to encourage expansion where the body has collapsed inward
- Balanced strengthening so the weaker side catches up to the stronger
This is purposeful work, not a generic back routine — and that specificity is what makes it effective.
Why “it depends on your curve” really matters
I keep returning to this because it’s the heart of safe scoliosis exercise. A right-sided thoracic curve and a left-sided lumbar curve need different things. Side-bending that helps one will worsen the other. Someone with a mild, stable adult curve has very different considerations from a teenager with a progressing curve, who needs specialist oversight. So treat general guidance — including this article — as a starting point for understanding, not a substitute for advice tailored to your spine.
Where a controlled Pilates approach fits
Pilates suits scoliosis well when it’s adapted, because its whole philosophy is built on control, alignment, and core stability — precisely the qualities an asymmetric spine benefits from. The difference between a generic mat class and a scoliosis-aware programme is that the latter accounts for your curve rather than working both sides identically. Done that way, it builds the balanced strength and body awareness that help you manage scoliosis confidently for the long term.
How the Scoliosis Management protocol helps
Sophie’s 10-Week Scoliosis Management Program is built around the principles of curve-aware, balanced strengthening — core stability, postural control, and breathing work — across 36 exercises designed with an asymmetric spine in mind. It gives you a structured, confidence-building path rather than a generic routine that ignores what makes scoliosis different.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Scoliosis varies greatly between individuals; please have your specific curve assessed by a doctor, physiotherapist, or scoliosis specialist before starting or changing an exercise programme — especially if your curve is significant, painful, or still progressing.