Bodyweight Squats
Bodyweight squats are a fundamental movement pattern that activates the quads, hamstrings, and glutes while reinforcing proper squat mechanics. Use them as a warm-up drill to prepare the lower body for training or to counteract the effects of prolonged sitting.
Setup
- Stand with feet slightly wider than hip-width apart, toes turned out 15–30 degrees.
- Arms can extend forward for counterbalance or stay at your sides.
- Initiate the squat by simultaneously bending at the hips and knees, as though sitting back into a chair.
- Lower until your hip crease drops below the top of your knee (full depth) or as deep as you can with good form.
- Drive through the whole foot to stand, squeezing glutes at the top.
Coaching Cues
What to feel:
- Quads and glutes working together through the full range of motion
- Weight balanced over the middle of your foot — not tipping forward or rocking back
- Knees tracking over your toes throughout the movement
Common mistakes:
- Knees caving inward — actively push them out in line with your toes
- Heels lifting off the ground — widen your stance or elevate your heels on a small plate
- Excessive forward lean — keep your chest up and brace your core
- Cutting depth short — aim for hip crease below the knee if mobility allows
Tip
If your heels come off the floor, it’s likely an ankle mobility issue rather than a strength problem. Place small plates or a wedge under your heels while you work on dorsiflexion mobility separately.
Video and animated demos coming soon.
Programming
| Parameter | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Reps | 15–20 per set |
| Sets | 2–3 |
| Frequency | Daily as a warm-up; before any lower body training |
| When to do it | Pre-workout warmup, lower body focus days |
Progressions
- Beginner: Squat to a box or chair — sit lightly and stand back up. Reduces range of motion demands.
- Intermediate: Full-depth bodyweight squat with a 2-second pause at the bottom.
- Advanced: Tempo squats (3 seconds down, 2-second pause, 1 second up) or single-leg pistol squat progressions.