10 Hamstring Strengthening Exercises Physical Therapists Want You to Try
Discover how hamstring strengthening exercises can relieve pain and improve mobility with tips from physical therapists.
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Your muscles — especially the big muscle groups in your legs, including your hamstrings — are designed to handle a lot, whether you’re lifting something heavy, hiking up a hill, or simply getting out of a car. Since your hamstrings are involved in so much, weakness in these muscles can affect a lot of different daily activities and make you more prone to injury or knee pain. The good news: Hamstring strengthening exercises can make many activities easier and prevent pain.
Your hamstrings, which are made up of three muscles on the back side of your thighs — and cross both your hip and knee joints — serve two primary functions: to help bend your knees and extend your hips. “Hamstrings also help other muscle groups rotate your knees, along with slowing your feet down to protect your knees when you kick forward,” says Dorian Logan, PT, DPT, a physical therapist at Hinge Health.
Read on to learn which hamstring strengthening exercises are recommended by Hinge Health physical therapists and how to perform them.
Interested in getting a personalized exercise therapy plan? Learn more about Hinge Health’s digital physical therapy program and see if you’re eligible.
Examiné par nos experts cliniques et médicaux
Dorian Logan, PT, DPT
Claire Morrow, PT, DPT
10 Hamstring Strengthening Exercises
No matter where you are on your exercise journey, taking time to strengthen your hamstrings can increase your quality of life. Dr. Logan typically recommends a mix of open-chain and closed-chain exercises to activate the hamstrings. That means a combination of movements where your foot is on the ground and off the ground. Both types of movement work the hamstrings in different ways that improve strength, flexibility, and mobility.
The exercises below are recommended by Hinge Health physical therapists and are a great place to start.
1. Seated Hamstring Squeeze
Vous souhaitez bénéficier de soins spécialisés ? Vérifiez si vous êtes couvert par notre programme gratuit →If you’re dealing with a hamstring strain or another acute knee injury, Dr. Logan says this move is a gentle way to engage the hamstring without a lot of resistance and a shorter range of motion.
How to do it:
Sit in a chair with one foot resting directly in front of the chair leg. Your other foot is flat on the floor.
Bend your knee and pull your heel straight back into the chair leg, applying pressure. Your foot may lift slightly off the floor.
Hold this position, then relax your leg.
Another beginner-friendly exercise (as long as you don’t use resistance), the standing hamstring curl moves you through a full range of motion from a straight to fully bent knee as you bring your foot toward your buttocks.
How to do it:
Stand with both hands resting on a sturdy surface like a table or chair.
Lift one leg’s heel off the floor and move it toward your butt.
Squeeze the muscles in the back of your leg while you hold this position.
Lower your foot back to the floor.
Get more information on how to do a hamstring curl.
Your hamstrings play a role in helping with hip extension, or bringing your leg behind you. The donkey kick targets this movement specifically. Consider adding a resistance band for an extra challenge.
How to do it:
Get into a comfortable position on your hands and knees. Your hands should be below your shoulders, and your knees below your hips.
Extend your leg back toward the ceiling while keeping your knee bent.
Focus on squeezing your butt muscles as you hold this position.
Lower your knee back to the floor to return to the starting position.
Get more information on how to do donkey kicks.