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Hip Replacement

What Happens During a Hip Replacement? A Step-by-Step Walkthrough

Medically reviewed by Matthew Harb, M.D.Updated May 30, 202610 min read

Knowing what actually happens during a hip replacement makes the decision easier and the day of surgery less anxious. Here is a step-by-step walkthrough of a modern direct anterior hip replacement — from the time you arrive, through anesthesia, the surgery itself, the implants used, and waking up — written for patients who want the real picture without the jargon.

Key takeaways

  • Modern hip replacement is performed through a small (3–4 inch) incision over the front of the hip — the direct anterior approach — which works between the muscles rather than cutting through them.
  • Most patients receive spinal anesthesia plus regional nerve blocks, not general anesthesia. You are sedated but breathing on your own, and you will not remember the surgery.
  • Intraoperative fluoroscopy and computer navigation are used during the operation to confirm implant position, size, and leg length.
  • The arthritic ball of the hip is removed and replaced with a modern triple-taper titanium stem; the socket is resurfaced with a porous-coated cup and a durable bearing.
  • A long-acting local anesthetic is injected into the soft tissues at the end of surgery, which keeps most patients surprisingly comfortable for the first 24 hours.
  • Most patients are up and walking the same day and home a few hours after surgery.

Most of the anxiety patients bring to hip replacement comes from not knowing what actually happens during the operation. The unknown is always scarier than the reality. So here is the honest walkthrough — from the time you arrive, through the surgery itself, the implants used, the imaging, and the recovery room — for patients who want the real picture without the jargon.

Before you arrive

The work of a smooth surgery starts well before the day itself. At your preoperative visit, we go through your medical history, review your imaging, confirm the surgical plan, and walk you through what to expect — including the days leading up to surgery and the days immediately after. You will also be given specific instructions for medications, what to stop taking and when, and how to prepare your skin and gut for surgery.

For the full preparation picture, see our guide on preparing for joint replacement surgery.

The morning of surgery

You arrive at the surgical facility a couple of hours before your scheduled surgery time. Most patients are checked in by a nurse, who reviews your vital signs and asks about your pain level, allergies, and any last-minute changes since the preoperative visit.

You are then taken to a preoperative holding area where you change into a surgical gown and meet the people who will be caring for you:

  • The pre-op nurse, who places an IV and reviews your medication history
  • The anesthesia team, who reviews your medical history one more time and walks you through the anesthesia plan
  • Members of the operating-room team, who will introduce themselves
  • Me — I always come by before surgery to mark the surgical site, answer any last questions, and confirm we are on the same page

Several medications are given in this holding area — typically a combination that helps prevent infection, controls nausea, provides preemptive pain control, and starts the multimodal pain regimen well before any incision is made. This is one of the reasons modern joint replacement is so much more comfortable than it used to be: pain management starts before pain.

Anesthesia — what to expect

For most patients, hip replacement is performed under spinal anesthesia rather than general anesthesia. Spinal anesthesia involves a small injection in the lower back that numbs the body from the waist down — you remain breathing on your own, and we add sedation so that you are comfortably unaware of the surgery and won't remember it.

The reasons we prefer this approach for joint replacement:

  • Less pain after surgery
  • Quicker recovery and earlier ability to walk
  • Less blood loss
  • Fewer of the post-anesthesia side effects (grogginess, nausea) that come with general anesthesia

In addition to the spinal, you typically receive regional nerve blocks — additional targeted anesthesia around the surgical area that extends pain control well beyond the operating room. The spinal can be placed either in the holding area or in the operating room itself.

What it feels like

You may remember being moved to the operating room. The next thing most patients remember is waking up in the recovery room, often surprised to learn the operation is already over.

The operation, step by step

Once anesthesia is in place and you are positioned on the operating table, the surgery itself follows a predictable sequence. The whole operative portion typically takes about 60–90 minutes for a primary hip replacement.

Step 1

Positioning and prep

You are positioned on a specialized operating table that allows precise control of the leg during the procedure. The surgical site is cleaned, draped, and prepared sterilely.

Step 2

The incision

A small incision — typically 3–4 inches (8–10 cm) — is made over the front of the hip. This is the "direct anterior" approach.

Step 3

Accessing the joint between the muscles

The hip joint is reached by working between the muscles rather than cutting through them. Preserving the muscle is the foundation of the rapid-recovery experience.

Step 4

Removing the arthritic ball

The worn ball of the hip (the femoral head) is removed. The arthritic and damaged tissue is cleared away.

Step 5

Preparing the socket

The socket (the acetabulum) is gently reshaped to accept the new implant. The size and angle are confirmed with intraoperative imaging.

Step 6

Placing the new socket

A metal cup with a porous outer surface is placed into the prepared socket. The porous coating allows your own bone to grow into the implant and secure it over time.

Step 7

Preparing the femur

The top of the thigh bone (the femur) is shaped to accept the stem of the implant.

Step 8

Placing the stem and new ball

A modern triple-taper titanium stem is placed into the femur. A new ball (the femoral head) is then attached to the stem.

Step 9

Testing motion, stability, and leg length

The new joint is tested through a full range of motion. Leg length and stability are confirmed — including with intraoperative imaging.

Step 10

Closing

A long-acting local anesthetic is injected into the soft tissues around the hip for sustained post-operative comfort. The incision is then closed in layers and a sterile dressing is applied.

Imaging and verification during surgery

One of the most important advances in modern hip replacement is the use of intraoperative fluoroscopy (real-time X-ray) and computer navigation during the operation. These tools let me confirm in real time:

  • The position and orientation of the socket implant
  • The size and seating of the stem in the femur
  • The combined leg length after the implants are placed
  • The stability of the new joint through a full range of motion

I want to be honest about what these tools are and are not. Technology supports surgical decision-making and precision — it doesn't replace it. The judgment is still the surgeon's; the imaging and navigation simply help execute the plan accurately.

The implants used

The components of a modern hip replacement:

  • Femoral stem — a modern triple-taper titanium stem with a porous outer surface that allows your bone to grow into the implant and secure it. The triple-taper design provides immediate stability and excellent long-term fixation.
  • Femoral head (the new ball) — a smooth, precisely-shaped ball that attaches to the stem and articulates within the cup.
  • Acetabular cup (the new socket) — a metal cup with a porous outer surface that bonds to your pelvic bone over time.
  • Bearing surface — typically a highly cross-linked polyethylene (a durable specialized plastic) between the ball and the cup. Bearing materials are chosen with long-term wear and hypoallergenic considerations in mind.

Together, these components are highly durable — more than 90% of modern hip replacements remain intact at 30 years in current data. For most patients today, a hip replacement is a once-in-a-lifetime procedure.

Closing and the numbing injection

Before the incision is closed, I inject a long-acting local anesthetic into the soft tissues around the hip. This is one of the most important comfort steps in the operation: it provides substantial pain control for the first 12–24 hours after surgery — often well beyond when you have already gone home.

The incision is then closed in layers — deep tissue first, then the skin — and a sterile dressing is applied. By this point the operative portion is complete, and the team begins the transition to waking you up.

Waking up and the recovery room

Most patients wake up in the recovery room with very little sense that surgery just happened. The combination of spinal anesthesia, regional blocks, and the long-acting numbing injection means the first hour or two are often surprisingly comfortable — patients commonly say things like “wait, is it over?”

In the recovery room:

  • Your vital signs are monitored as the spinal anesthesia begins to wear off
  • You are warmed and rehydrated
  • Anti-nausea medication is given as needed
  • The first dose of scheduled pain medication is started
  • Once you are stable and the spinal has worn off enough that you can move your leg, the team gets you ready to stand and walk

Walking and going home

For most patients, the surprise of the day is standing and walking the same day as surgery — often within a few hours of waking up in the recovery room. Physical therapy meets you in the recovery area, walks you through the first steps with a walker, and confirms that you can navigate stairs (or whatever you will face at home).

Most patients then go home the same day. Some patients spend one night — typically to make sure pain is well controlled, you can use the bathroom comfortably, and you have no nausea or vomiting. The decision is individual and made with safety as the priority. For more on this, see our article on outpatient (same-day) joint replacement.

What to expect that first night at home

The long-acting numbing injection keeps most patients surprisingly comfortable through the first night. Discomfort tends to be more noticeable around days 2–3 as the numbing wears off — which is exactly what the scheduled Tylenol, anti-inflammatory, ice, and elevation regimen is built to handle. The plan is to stay ahead of the pain curve, not to chase it.

From Dr. Harb

The biggest change in hip replacement over the last decade isn't any single piece of technology — it's how everything fits together. Spinal anesthesia, regional blocks, the direct anterior approach, intraoperative imaging, modern implants, the long-acting numbing injection, scheduled non-opioid pain control, same-day mobilization. None of these is dramatic on its own. Together they make the experience of hip replacement fundamentally different from what your parents or grandparents remember.

For the broader picture of what happens after, see the hip replacement recovery timeline and our guides on sleeping, driving, and the medications around joint replacement. The whole library is here for you.

Frequently asked questions

How long does a hip replacement take?

The surgical portion of a primary hip replacement typically takes about 60–90 minutes, but the total time in the operating room is longer once positioning, anesthesia setup, imaging, and closing are included. Most patients are in the operating-room area for 2–3 hours, then 1–2 hours in the recovery room before going home.

Will I be awake during the surgery?

You will not remember the surgery. Most patients receive spinal anesthesia plus regional nerve blocks rather than general anesthesia — the lower body is fully numb, and sedation keeps you comfortable and unaware throughout the operation. This approach is associated with less pain, quicker recovery, less blood loss, and fewer side effects than general anesthesia for joint replacement.

Will it hurt during surgery?

No. The combination of spinal anesthesia, regional nerve blocks, and a long-acting local anesthetic injected at the end of surgery means most patients feel little to nothing through the operation and the first 24 hours afterward. Discomfort is more noticeable around days 2–3 as the long-acting numbing wears off — but by then you are home, on a scheduled medication regimen, and moving.

How big is the incision?

For a primary direct anterior hip replacement, the incision is typically 3–4 inches (about 8–10 cm) over the front of the hip. For complex or revision cases, an incision over the side of the hip may be used and may be longer.

What is the implant made of?

A modern hip replacement uses a triple-taper titanium stem (placed in the thigh bone), a metal ball (the new femoral head), a porous-coated metal socket (the cup, which bonds to your pelvic bone), and a bearing surface — typically highly cross-linked polyethylene (a durable plastic) — between the ball and cup. Bearing materials are chosen with long-term wear and hypoallergenic considerations in mind.

Will I have to stay overnight in the hospital?

Most patients can go home the same day as surgery. Some patients spend one night in the hospital — typically to ensure pain is well controlled, they can use the bathroom comfortably, and they have no nausea or vomiting. The decision is individual and made with safety as the priority.

How are leg length and stability checked during surgery?

Intraoperative fluoroscopy (real-time X-ray) and computer navigation are used to confirm implant position, size, and leg length at multiple points during the operation — not just at the end. This is what allows accurate placement of components in real time, rather than discovering an issue after closing. The implants are also tested through a full range of motion before closing to confirm stability.

What does "direct anterior approach" actually mean?

It refers to the surgical path I use to access the hip — through the front of the hip, working between the muscles rather than cutting through them. Preserving the muscle is what allows many patients to move early and recover comfortably. See our companion article on the direct anterior hip replacement for the full picture.

References

  1. Dr. Harb’s Hip Replacement Handbook (PDF)
  2. Total Hip Replacement — OrthoInfo (AAOS)
  3. Hip & Knee Patient Resources — AAHKS

This article is for general education and is not a substitute for personalized medical advice. Recovery timelines vary by patient, procedure, medical history, and surgeon-specific protocol. Please consult Matthew Harb, M.D. about your specific condition.

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