How long does soleus strain last?
Soleus Strain does not recover by calendar alone; the honest timeline is the phased arc: Soleus strains recover well over a few weeks by gradually building it back up, with the work done knee-bent: settle it down and start gently moving, rebuild seated (knee-bent) calf raises, add slow heel drops and a knee-bent calf stretch, then work back up to running. You move to each stage once you're pain-free with no extra swelling.
A soleus strain is a partial strain of the deeper calf muscle under the main calf. It often feels like a deep, cramp-like ache during running, and the rehab is biased toward bent-knee calf loading. The soleus does the bulk of the work in steady running and standing, so it tends to get overloaded by a jump in mileage rather than one explosive moment.
What the pattern means
A deep, often cramp-like ache in the lower/deeper calf — the soleus, the mono-articular deep calf muscle — that typically crept in with running mileage rather than arriving as a sudden 'kicked-in-the-calf' pop (that's the gastrocnemius 'tennis leg' strain). That pattern is the guardrail for this page: it keeps the advice tied to the condition's symptoms and loading plan rather than to a generic body-part label.
One thing to check first: make sure a deep calf ache isn't a clot — if there's swelling, warmth, or redness alongside the ache, see a clinician before starting this plan. If that does not fit, stay cautious and get the pattern checked.
What to do first
First — rule out a clot, and never massage a swollen calf: Before you load this calf, be sure a deep ache isn't a deep vein clot (DVT). Warning signs: one-sided swelling, warmth, redness, or marked tenderness — especially after recent travel, bed rest, surgery, pregnancy, active cancer, or a past clot. Train the soleus with a bent knee: The soleus is the only calf muscle that doesn't cross your knee, so it's the one doing the work when your knee is bent. That's why your strengthening is biased to the BENT-KNEE position: seated heel raises, eccentric heel drops with the knee bent, and the bent-knee soleus stretch (heel down, both knees bent, 30 seconds, three times a day).
The timeline moves fastest when each phase earns the next one. Pain that settles and cleaner control matter more than an exact date. That is the difference between useful modification and avoiding life until everything feels perfect.
How to progress
The phase order matters. Start with calm: Calm the soleus strain with relative rest, gentle movement, and BENT-KNEE isometric activation (POLICE for the first 24-48h). Only proceed once a clot has been ruled out. Then move toward rebuild: Restore SEATED / bent-knee heel raises (double then single leg), add eccentric bent-knee heel drops and the bent-knee soleus stretch. The later target is back to running, where the payoff is running again.
If progress stalls, adjust dose first: less range, speed, load, time, or repetition. How is this different from a normal calf strain? A 'normal' calf strain is usually the gastrocnemius — the big muscle you feel when your knee is straight, often torn by a sudden push-off ('tennis leg'). The soleus is the deeper muscle underneath, worked with the knee bent, and it tends to creep in with running rather than pop. Why does the knee-bent test matter? The gastrocnemius crosses the knee, so when you bend your knee it goes slack and stops sharing the load — leaving the soleus to do the work. So if your calf pain shows up with the knee BENT (and not so much knee-straight), it points to the soleus.
Full guide: Soleus Strain — recovery, timeline & exercises
Related: Calf Strain — recovery guide