Shoulder Pain Physiotherapy Central London

Fix the Cause. Restore Movement. Stay Pain-Free.

Introduction

Shoulder pain often becomes noticeable during everyday activities such as lifting the arm, reaching for objects, or repeated use of the shoulder. These movements may start to feel uncomfortable or less controlled than usual.
With ongoing strain, even simple tasks like getting dressed, carrying objects, or working for longer periods can begin to feel more effortful. You may also notice reduced ease during repeated or overhead arm movements.
This is commonly linked to repetitive shoulder use, postural strain, or imbalance in the surrounding muscles. If not addressed, it can gradually limit normal movement and daily function.

The focus is to understand what is driving the problem, not just the symptoms and improve movement through a structured rehabilitation approach.

Shoulder pain physiotherapy helps reduce pain, restore mobility, and improve strength by addressing the underlying cause.

How Shoulder Pain Affects Movement

Shoulder pain often affects how the arm is used throughout the day.

Discomfort is often felt during dressing, carrying objects, or desk-based work. The main limitation is not just pain, but reduced movement efficiency over time.

When to Seek Physiotherapy for Shoulder Pain

If shoulder pain continues for several days without improvement or begins to affect movement, it may need assessment.
When reaching, lifting, or using the arm repeatedly starts to feel restricted, it often indicates an underlying issue.
Early attention can help prevent the problem from becoming more persistent and limiting daily activity.

Clinical Services

How Physiotherapy Treats Shoulder Pain

Shoulder pain is treated through a structured rehabilitation approach focused on restoring movement, strength, and control.

Detailed Assessment

Assessment helps understand how the shoulder is functioning and what is contributing to the problem, rather than focusing only on the painful area.

Targeted Treatment

Treatment may include hands-on techniques to improve mobility, combined with targeted exercises to rebuild strength and control. Advice on posture and movement is also included to reduce unnecessary strain.

Guidance & Education

As movement improves, rehabilitation focuses on restoring normal function and improving load tolerance in daily activities.

Progressive Rehabilitation

Short-term symptom relief is only part of the process. The focus is long-term movement improvement and stability.

Most treatment focuses on short-term relief. This approach focuses on restoring movement quality and long-term shoulder function.

Conditions Covered

Each condition is managed based on how it affects movement and daily function.

Rotator cuff strain

Frozen shoulder

Muscle imbalance or tightness

Postural shoulder pain

Expected Outcomes

With consistent treatment, you may notice:
Progress depends on how the body responds over time.

Why Choose Personal-Physio

Treatment is guided by a clear, structured plan based on how your body moves — not just where the pain is.
It combines hands-on physiotherapy with progressive rehabilitation in a high-quality training environment in Central London.
The focus is on restoring movement, improving strength and control, and supporting long-term recovery rather than short-term relief.

Frequently asked questions.

What types of shoulder pain can physiotherapy help with?
Physiotherapy can help with many types of shoulder pain, including rotator cuff-related pain, tendon irritation, shoulder stiffness, pain with lifting or reaching, gym-related shoulder pain, sports injuries, frozen shoulder, shoulder instability and pain linked with the neck or upper back.
At Personal-Physio, the aim is to understand what is contributing to your symptoms and create a clear plan to reduce pain, restore movement, rebuild strength and improve confidence.
Shoulder pain can be influenced by many factors, including tendon overload, weakness, stiffness, reduced shoulder blade control, training errors, previous injury, neck or upper back involvement, joint sensitivity or sudden increases in load.
Often there is not one single cause. A good assessment looks at your symptoms, movement, strength, training habits, work demands and the activities you want to return to.
Your assessment will usually include a detailed discussion about your symptoms, how they started, what movements aggravate them, your work or training demands, previous injuries and goals.
We then assess shoulder movement, strength, control, sensitivity, neck and upper back movement, and any relevant functional tasks such as reaching, lifting, pushing, pulling or gym movements.
Not always. Many shoulder problems can be assessed clinically without needing a scan straight away.
Imaging may be useful if there has been significant trauma, severe weakness, suspected dislocation, persistent night pain, or symptoms that are not improving as expected. If further investigation or medical review is appropriate, this will be discussed during your assessment.
Yes. Rotator cuff-related shoulder pain often responds well to a structured physiotherapy and rehabilitation plan.
Treatment may include advice, hands-on treatment where appropriate, mobility work, progressive strengthening, shoulder blade control, load management and a gradual return to lifting, gym training or sport.
Physiotherapy can help manage frozen shoulder by supporting comfort, maintaining available movement and guiding appropriate exercise at each stage of the condition.
The approach needs to be carefully matched to symptom irritability. Pushing aggressively through pain is not always helpful, especially during more sensitive stages.
Yes. Hands-on treatment can be helpful for some shoulder problems, particularly where there is muscle tension, stiffness, guarding, neck or upper back involvement, or discomfort with movement.
At Personal-Physio, hands-on treatment may include soft tissue therapy, sports massage, joint mobilisation, acupuncture or dry needling where clinically appropriate. It is usually combined with rehabilitation and strengthening so improvements carry over into daily life, training or sport.
In most cases, yes. Strengthening is often important because the shoulder needs to tolerate reaching, lifting, pushing, pulling, carrying, gym training and sport.
Your exercises may include rotator cuff strengthening, shoulder blade control, pressing and pulling progressions, mobility work, trunk control, gym-based rehabilitation or sport-specific loading depending on your symptoms and goals.

Often yes, but your training may need to be modified. Some exercises may need adjusting temporarily, especially if they repeatedly aggravate symptoms.

Physiotherapy can help you identify what you can continue, what to reduce, and how to gradually rebuild tolerance to pressing, pulling, overhead work, swimming, racket sports or gym training.
This depends on the type of shoulder problem, how long symptoms have been present, how irritable they are and what you want to return to.
Some short-term overload issues may improve within a few sessions, while frozen shoulder, post-surgical rehabilitation, instability or longer-standing shoulder pain may require a more structured rehabilitation plan over several weeks or months.
You should seek urgent medical advice if shoulder pain follows significant trauma, if you suspect a dislocation or fracture, if you have sudden severe weakness, chest pain, shortness of breath, unexplained weight loss, fever, night sweats, or severe unrelenting pain.
These symptoms are uncommon, but they should be assessed medically before continuing with physiotherapy.
Personal-Physio combines detailed assessment, hands-on treatment, rehabilitation and clinical strength & conditioning. The focus is not only on reducing shoulder pain, but also restoring movement, rebuilding strength and improving confidence with the activities that matter to you.
Sessions are one-to-one and personalised, with clinic-based physiotherapy, gym-based rehabilitation and home visit physiotherapy available where appropriate.

Start your recovery with a clear, structured plan

Book your appointment and start addressing the cause of your shoulder pain with a clear, structured plan.