How Long Does Hemorrhoid Surgery Take to Heal?

May 6, 2026
Surgery Recovery

If you're preparing for a hemorrhoidectomy — or trying to decide whether to move forward with one — you deserve a straight answer about what recovery actually looks like.

Have questions about recovery? A board-certified colorectal surgeon can walk you through what to expect.

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The honest answer: it takes time, but it's worth it

Hemorrhoidectomy recovery is real. It's not a procedure you bounce back from the next day. The first week in particular can be uncomfortable, and full internal healing takes 4 to 6 weeks. But with the right preparation and post-operative care, the process is manageable — and most patients say the long-term relief was worth every uncomfortable day.

The first 24 hours

You'll go home the same day as surgery, but you'll need someone to drive you. Urinary retention — difficulty urinating after surgery — is the most common immediate issue and usually resolves on its own within a few hours.

Pain in the first 24 hours can be significant. Use your prescribed pain medication on schedule from the start — don't wait until you're in acute discomfort to take it. Staying ahead of the pain makes everything else easier.

Week one: the hardest part

Week one is the most challenging. Pain is at its peak, and most patients feel anxious about their first bowel movement. The keys to getting through this week comfortably:

Take stool softeners consistently to keep stools soft. Do sitz baths 3 to 4 times a day and after every bowel movement. Stay well hydrated and eat fiber-rich foods. Take pain medication on schedule. Rest and avoid anything that increases abdominal pressure.

Most patients can move around the house by days 3 or 4 but aren't ready for office work yet.

Weeks two and three: real improvement

By the second week, most patients notice a meaningful turn. Pain decreases noticeably, bowel movements become less difficult, and energy returns. Many patients with desk jobs return to work during this period — though a padded cushion for extended sitting helps.

Physical restrictions (no heavy lifting, no strenuous exercise) typically remain in place for 3 to 4 weeks total.

Weeks three to six: full recovery

By weeks three and four, most patients feel substantially back to normal. Internal healing continues even as external symptoms resolve, which is why the 4 to 6 week mark is considered full recovery.

What makes the biggest difference

Post-operative care. This is where most of the variation in patient experience comes from. At CR Surgery OC, Dr. Chung schedules a follow-up visit within the first week after surgery and is accessible between appointments. A surgeon who is reachable, communicative, and proactive about pain management during recovery is not optional — it's the standard that patients deserve.

Tips that actually help

Prepare your recovery space before surgery: high-fiber foods, stool softeners, a sitz bath basin, comfortable clothing, and your prescriptions all ready to go. Eat and drink properly from day one — don't wait until constipation becomes a problem. And call your surgeon if anything doesn't feel right. That's what they're there for.

!Recovery red flags

Increasing pain, fever, heavy bleeding, signs of infection, or inability to pass stool or urine are not normal recovery experiences. Call your surgeon.

Most concerns are easier to address early.

Realistic timelines, no sugarcoating.

If you have questions during recovery, or you're weighing whether surgery is right for you, get straight answers from a specialist who does this every day.

Llame al (714) 988-8690Book a virtual consult