Conservative treatments include physical therapy and activity modification. If conservative treatment fails, surgery is required. Statistics show that the incidence of rotator cuff tears increased from 23.5 per 100,000 in 1995 to 83.1 per 100,000 in 2009. That is why rotator cuff repair has become the most common shoulder surgery and therefore its postoperative rehabilitation is common in clinical practice. Surgical methods have also been improving, evolving from open surgery to small incision surgery to arthroscopic surgery. Arthroscopic repair has become the gold standard in the treatment of rotator cuff tears. Finding the right exercises throughout the postoperative rehabilitation process is quite challenging. The daily activities commonly performed by patients after surgery were observed in the study. Active assisted joint mobility training, external rotation, forward flexion, internal rotation, passive joint mobility training. 2. Active assisted joint forward flexion training for the non-affected upper extremity. 3. Towel roll placed under the elbow joint, active assisted joint internal rotation in the plane of the scapula. 4. Active assisted joint forward flexion mobility training with a pulley. 5. Hydrotherapy, submerged scapular elevation in the plane of the scapula. 6. Scapular plane mild resistance training. 7. Resistance training 7, Scapular pulling on a seated rower In conclusion, postoperative rehabilitation should be individualized according to the patient’s needs. Rehabilitation guidelines that depend on the patient’s condition are still preferable to time-based programs that are actively detrimental to the safe healing of the tendon in the early postoperative phase. Careful monitoring of exercises to avoid pain and patient education on daily living are important aspects of postoperative rehabilitation. Higher levels of activity should be performed until pain is eliminated, and resumption of exercise should be adapted to the needs of the athlete.