Beginner 2 min read

Banded Side Steps

Banded side steps target the gluteus medius and hip abductors — muscles that stabilize the pelvis during walking, running, and squatting. Weak glute medius is a common contributor to knee pain and hip instability.

Setup

  1. Place a resistance band around both legs just above the knees (easier) or around the ankles (harder).
  2. Stand with feet hip-width apart, creating tension in the band. Adopt a quarter-squat position with a slight hip hinge.
  3. Keeping your toes pointed forward, step laterally with one foot, then follow with the other foot — maintaining constant tension in the band.
  4. Take 10–15 steps in one direction, then reverse.
  5. Keep your chest up and core braced throughout.

Coaching Cues

What to feel:

  • A burn in the outer hip and glute of the leading leg
  • Constant tension in the band — never let it go slack
  • Stable pelvis and torso — no rocking side to side

Common mistakes:

  • Standing too tall — stay in the athletic quarter-squat position
  • Letting the trailing foot snap back quickly — control both the step-out and the follow
  • Toes turning outward — keep them pointed straight ahead to target the glute medius
  • Using too heavy a band and compensating with a hip shift
Tip

Think about pushing the ground apart with your feet. The goal is controlled, deliberate steps — not speed. If your lower back starts to fatigue, you may be standing too upright.

Programming

Parameter Recommendation
Reps 10–15 steps per direction
Sets 2–3
Frequency Before every lower body session; 3–5x per week for maintenance
When to do it Pre-workout warmup, lower body focus days

Progressions

  1. Beginner: Band above the knees, small steps, slight squat position.
  2. Intermediate: Band around the ankles, maintain deeper squat position throughout.
  3. Advanced: Band around the forefoot, add a forward-and-back zigzag pattern (monster walks).