Back Squat: A Complete Guide

Why the Back Squat Matters

  • Often called the “king of all exercises.”
  • Builds lower-body strength, leg size, core stability, and mental toughness.
  • Essential for strength athletes, sports performance, and physique-focused lifters.

How to Do the Back Squat

Step 1 — Get Under the Bar

  • Barbell at mid-chest height.
  • Grip slightly wider than shoulders, palms down.
  • Bar rests on upper traps/back of shoulders.
  • Elbows angled down, not back; pinch shoulder blades.

Step 2 — Unrack and Set Stance

  • Flex abs, lift bar, take small steps back.
  • Feet slightly wider than shoulder-width, toes angled slightly out.
  • Keep feet flat, maintain tightness and neutral spine.

Step 3 — Squat Down

  • Push hips back, descend until thighs roughly parallel.
  • Controlled speed, don’t bounce out of bottom.

Step 4 — Stand Up (Lockout)

  • Drive feet into ground, rise evenly with hips and shoulders.
  • Engage abs, quads, glutes at top.

Common Mistakes

  1. Rounding Your Back – increases risk of injury; keep elbows under bar, abs tight.
  2. Short Range of Motion – squat at least to parallel for max muscle growth.
  3. Knee Collapse – often caused by weak glutes; keep knees tracking outward.

Muscles Worked

  • Quadriceps – main leg extenders, largest leg muscle.
  • Glutes – hip extension, stretch at bottom, contract at lockout.
  • Hamstrings – assist hip extension and knee flexion.
  • Upper Back & Spinal Erectors – stabilize bar and torso.
  • Abs – support torso, maintain stability.

Programming Back Squats

  • Strength: Heavy weight, low reps (3–5 sets × 3–5 reps).
  • Hypertrophy: Moderate weight, moderate reps (4–5 sets × 8–12 reps).
  • Breathing Squats: High-rep old-school method; set of 20 with 2–3 deep breaths between reps.

Variations

  • High-Bar Squat: Bar higher on traps; more upright torso; reduces lower back strain.
  • Anderson Squat: Pin/bottom-up squat; focuses on weak points.
  • Safety Bar Squat: Thick padded bar; reduces shoulder strain, increases upper back recruitment.

Alternatives

  • Front Squat: Bar on front shoulders; reduces lower back stress.
  • Trap Bar Squat/Deadlift: Keeps torso upright; more glute/hamstring activation.
  • Leg Press: Supported; reduces upper-body stress; maintain range of motion.

Programming Tips

  • Adjust stance for comfort; slightly wider than shoulders, toes slightly out.
  • Not mandatory for everyone — choose exercises based on goals, mobility, and prior injuries.

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