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Recovery

How to Get Around After Surgery — Lawrence, KS Guide

Practical mobility options for Lawrence-area residents recovering from surgery. Knee scooters, wheelchairs, transport chairs, rollators — when each one is right.

By KC Mobility Scooter Rentals Updated

Surgery isn’t the hard part. The four to eight weeks AFTER surgery — getting to the bathroom, getting to your follow-up appointment, getting groceries, getting your kid to school — that’s where most people realize they didn’t think this through.

This guide is for Lawrence, Kansas residents (and the families helping them) who are about to have surgery and need a practical mobility plan for the recovery period.

Match the equipment to the surgery

The right rental depends on what got operated on. Here’s the quick decision tree:

Foot, ankle, or lower-leg surgery → knee scooter

If your surgery is on a foot or ankle (Achilles repair, bunionectomy, fracture fix, plantar fasciitis surgery), your surgeon will tell you to keep weight off that leg for 4 to 6 weeks. The standard option is crutches, but crutches are exhausting after the first day.

A knee scooter lets you rest the injured leg on a padded platform and roll yourself around using your good leg. Faster than crutches, less tiring, and your hands stay free to carry coffee or a phone.

Knee or hip replacement → walker first, then nothing

Joint-replacement surgery typically goes like this: you leave the hospital with a walker (or crutches), use it heavily for 1-3 weeks, then transition to a cane, then to nothing. A 4-wheel rollator with a built-in seat is more comfortable than a basic walker because you can rest mid-walk.

If your hospital sent you home with a basic 2-wheel walker that’s hurting your back or wrists, switching to a rollator usually fixes it.

Back surgery → wheelchair or rollator depending on severity

Back surgery recoveries vary wildly. Spinal fusion can knock you down for 2-3 months; a smaller microdiscectomy might have you walking the next day. Talk to your surgeon about expected weight-bearing and movement restrictions.

If standing for more than a few minutes is going to be hard, a transport chair (caregiver-pushed) handles short trips and the rollator covers walking with rest stops. For longer recovery where you need to leave the house regularly, a manual wheelchair gives the rider self-mobility.

Cardiac, abdominal, or general surgery with extended fatigue → mobility scooter

Heart surgery, major abdominal surgery, and recoveries from cancer treatment often leave a patient mobile-but-tired for 2-3 months. They can stand and walk for 5 minutes; they can’t do a 45-minute trip to the grocery store.

A mobility scooter bridges this gap. They can leave the house for normal life — the store, follow-ups, family events — without burning all their energy on the walk from the parking lot.

How long do you need it?

Match the rental term to the recovery, not the calendar:

Surgery typeTypical rental term
Bunionectomy / minor foot surgery4 weeks
Achilles repair6-8 weeks
Knee replacement2-3 weeks (walker), then nothing
Hip replacement1-3 weeks (walker), occasional rollator after
Back surgery (microdisc)2-4 weeks
Back surgery (fusion)6-12 weeks
Heart / cardiac4-8 weeks
Major abdominal4-6 weeks

If your recovery runs longer than 8 weeks, the math sometimes favors buying instead of renting. See our rent-vs-buy knee scooter comparison — the same logic applies for other equipment.

Plan delivery before surgery, not after

Most of our Lawrence delivery calls happen the day before discharge — the family realizes their mom is coming home tomorrow and there’s no equipment in the house. We can usually still make it work, but it’s stressful.

The cleaner sequence:

  1. Two weeks before surgery: Talk to your surgeon about expected recovery time and equipment.
  2. One week before surgery: Reserve the equipment. Tell us the surgery date — we’ll deliver the day before discharge.
  3. Day of discharge: Equipment is already at home. Family member meets the patient and the equipment together.
  4. End of recovery: Call us, we pick up. No long-term contract.

What you’ll spend

Roughly, for a Lawrence rental:

  • Knee scooter, 6 weeks: $279 monthly + ~$25 second-month adjustment = around $304 + $75 delivery = $379 total
  • Standard rollator, 3 weeks: $79/week × 3 = $237 + $75 delivery = $312
  • Manual wheelchair, 4 weeks: $429 monthly = $429 + $75 delivery = $504
  • Mobility scooter, 8 weeks: $695/month × 2 = $1,390 + $75 delivery = $1,465

These are rough — your actual rate depends on the specific equipment and term. See Lawrence pricing for the full rate sheet.

What we don’t do

Three things we want to be clear about:

  1. We don’t give medical advice. We rent equipment. Your surgeon, primary care doctor, and physical therapist make the medical decisions; we deliver the gear that follows from them.
  2. We don’t bill insurance. Direct-paid only. If Medicare or your plan needs to cover this, you need a certified DME provider, not us.
  3. We don’t pressure-sell long contracts. Rent for one week, four weeks, or whatever the doctor’s plan is — extend if you need to, return when you’re done.

How to get started

Call 913-775-1098 with your surgery date and your surgeon’s recovery timeline. We’ll recommend the equipment, quote a price, and schedule delivery.

Or browse the Lawrence equipment list and reserve online.

Ready to reserve your equipment?

Reserve online at kcmobilityrentals.com/reserve or call 913-775-1098.

  • Hospitality rental — no medical paperwork
  • Same-day delivery in the KC metro
  • Full refund 24h+ before delivery · 50% within 24h
  • Serving Bartle Hall, Arrowhead, OPCC, the Plaza & 20+ KC venues

Common Questions

Frequently asked questions.

Frequently asked questions.

How long do most people need a mobility aid after surgery?
Foot or ankle surgeries: 4-6 weeks non-weight-bearing. Knee replacement: 2-4 weeks before walking comfortably. Hip replacement: 1-3 weeks needing a walker. Back surgery: highly variable. Talk to your surgeon for your specific timeline.
Will I need to buy or rent?
Rent if you'll need it 8 weeks or less. Buy if longer. Most post-surgical recoveries are 4-8 weeks, so renting is the cheaper path for most people.
Does Medicare cover this?
Through certified DME providers, sometimes — depending on the equipment and your plan. Through a hospitality rental like ours, no. We're direct-paid, no insurance, no prescription. If insurance billing matters to you, we'll point you to a Lawrence-area DME provider.

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