Exercise Library Legs Stiff Leg Deadlift
Hamstrings Legs Intermediate Barbell

Stiff Leg Deadlift

Primary: Hamstrings · Secondary: Glutes

About This Exercise

Stiff Leg Deadlift is a high impact compound movement used to improve posterior chain strength while building hamstrings, glutes, and spinal erector development. Stiff leg deadlifts increase hamstring stretch demand and require strict spinal bracing to stay safe and productive.

For athletes searching for how to do stiff leg deadlift with better results, the key is consistent setup, controlled tempo, and progressive overload over weeks instead of random max effort sessions. When technique quality stays high, this exercise supports muscle gain, strength carryover, and lower injury risk during demanding training blocks.

Program Stiff Leg Deadlift in rep ranges that match your goal: moderate reps for hypertrophy, lower reps for strength, and occasional higher rep sets for work capacity and technical practice. Track load, repetitions, and perceived effort so progression is planned rather than guessed.

Within a Push Pull Legs, Upper Lower, or full body plan, Stiff Leg Deadlift works best when paired with complementary movements that do not duplicate the same fatigue pattern. This approach improves recovery and helps you train safe and efficient hip hinge mechanics with long term consistency.

Step-by-Step Instructions

  1. 1 Set up for Stiff Leg Deadlift with stable body alignment and choose a load that allows strict reps from start to finish.
  2. 2 Brace your core before every repetition and keep your breathing pattern consistent to maintain trunk stability.
  3. 3 Initiate the movement with the target joints and muscles instead of using momentum or rushed timing.
  4. 4 Use a controlled eccentric phase of about two to three seconds to keep tension on the working muscles.
  5. 5 Move through a safe and repeatable range of motion that matches your mobility and technical control.
  6. 6 Keep joint tracking clean, especially at the hardest part of each rep where form often breaks down.
  7. 7 Stop the set when rep speed or position quality drops, even if more repetitions are possible with compensation.
  8. 8 Rest according to your goal, then repeat with the same execution standard while logging load and reps.

Benefits

  • Develops posterior chain strength with a progression friendly loading pattern.
  • Supports hamstrings, glutes, and spinal erector development when trained with adequate weekly volume.
  • Improves safe and efficient hip hinge mechanics and overall movement efficiency.
  • Fits well into beginner to advanced programs because it scales through load, tempo, and range adjustments.

Technique Tips

  • Use a short setup checklist before each set of Stiff Leg Deadlift: stance or grip, brace, and starting position.
  • Avoid the most common mistake of chasing heavier weight before your previous load is technically consistent.
  • Film one top set from time to time to check bar path, joint alignment, and end range control.
  • When progress stalls on Stiff Leg Deadlift, adjust volume or rep targets for two to four weeks before changing the exercise.

Variations

Deadlift

Alternative compound option for the hamstrings that changes loading profile and resistance curve while training a related pattern.

Romanian Deadlift (Barbell)

Alternative compound option for the hamstrings that changes loading profile and resistance curve while training a related pattern.

Romanian Deadlift (Dumbbell)

Alternative compound option for the hamstrings that changes loading profile and resistance curve while training a related pattern.

Sumo Deadlift

Alternative compound option for the hamstrings that changes loading profile and resistance curve while training a related pattern.

Use This Exercise In

The generator automatically includes Stiff Leg Deadlift in relevant sessions based on your selected split and equipment.

More Legs Exercises

This tool is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical or professional fitness advice. Always consult a qualified professional before starting a new training program.

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