Cancer is one of the largest causes of morbidity and mortality across the country and worldwide. Based on incidence rates, the leading cancers in the United States include breast, lung, prostate, colorectal, and melanoma. Cancer rehabilitation aims to improve function and promote physical, social, and emotional well-being to maximize one’s quality of life related to cancer or its treatment. Cancer patients suffer from a wide variety of symptoms, including fatigue, pain, neuropathy, muscle wasting, cognitive dysfunction, mobility difficulties, lymphedema, dysphagia, bowel and bladder changes, and psychosocial distress. Rehabilitation has been shown to be beneficial at all stages of cancer diagnosis and treatment and is available in clinical settings across the care continuum, including acute inpatient rehabilitation, acute consult services, subacute services, outpatient clinics, and hospice units. This chapter discusses the effects of cancer and cancer treatments such as chemotherapy, hormonal therapy, immunotherapy, radiation therapy, and surgery.