The 20 Best Leg Exercises For Muscle And Strength | Studio Society (2024)

Looking for those tree-stump legs that would put a rugby player to shame? Those legs that could kickstart a Boeing 747?

We’ve put together a list of our 20 favourite exercises to make the most out of leg day and build the legs you’ve always dreamt of. We’ve only included exercises that use equipment that you would expect to find in any gym and ranked them from easiest to most difficult. Adding a variety of these exercises to your leg day routine will help you improve your strength, stamina, and stability and promote rapid muscle development in your quads, glutes, hamstrings, and calves. A number of these exercises will also stimulate your core and back as an added bonus.

Make sure to read our safety tips for advice on how to safely develop your leg muscles without injuring yourself at the bottom of this article.

On your marks, get set, SQUAT!

1. Bodyweight Squats

Equipment Needed: None

Target Muscles: Quads, Glutes, Hamstrings, Core

Stand with feet shoulder-width apart and your arms crossed in front of your chest. Squat down by bending your knees and pushing your hips back. Keep your chest and chin up, and spine neutral. Return to the starting position and repeat.

2. Leg Press

Equipment Needed: Leg Press Machine

Target Muscles: Quads, Glutes, Hamstrings, Calves

Sit in the leg press machine with feet shoulder-width apart against the push plate. Push up enough to disengage the safety lock, then lower the weight towards your chest by bending your knees. Push back to the starting position.

3. Step-Ups

Equipment Needed: Box or Step

Target Muscles: Quads, Glutes, Calves

Stand in front of a box or step. Step one foot onto it and push off from the other foot to stand straight. Keep your head, neck, and back in a straight line. Step back down and repeat. For an added challenge, hold a dumbbell in your hands when performing the step-ups.

4. Lunges

Equipment Needed: None

Target Muscles: Quads, Hamstrings, Glutes

Take a step forward and lower your body until both knees are bent at a 90-degree angle. Make sure to step far enough so that your front knee does not extend past your toes. Push off your front foot to return to the starting position. Repeat on the other side. For an added challenge, hold a dumbbell in your hands when performing the lunges.

5. Lying Leg Curl

Equipment Needed: Leg Curl Machine

Target Muscles: Hamstrings, Calves

Lie down on the leg curl machine, hook your ankles under the pads, and curl your legs towards your buttocks. Slowly extend your legs back to the starting position. Make sure to use slow and controlled movements, avoiding any jerking action. Make sure to grip the handles tightly to avoid pulling yourself up by your back.

6. Goblet Squats

Equipment Needed: Dumbbell or Kettlebell

Target Muscles: Quads, Glutes, Hamstrings, Core, Upper back

Hold a dumbbell at chest level, gripping one side of the dumbbell with upward-facing palms and letting it hang vertically between your arms. Perform a squat, lowering your body while keeping your chest up and spine neutral. Return to starting position. You could substitute the dumbbell for a kettlebell.

7. Bulgarian Split Squats

Equipment Needed: Bench

Target Muscles: Quads, Hamstrings, Glutes, Core

Stand facing away from a bench (about one pace), with one foot resting elevated behind you on the bench. Lower into a lunge, making sure that your front knee doesn’t extend past your toes and that your chin doesn’t sag down to your chest. Push up through your front foot to return to the starting position. Repeat on the other leg. This requires some balance, and you might find yourself tipping to the side as you perfect your form.

8. Calf Raises

Equipment Needed: Dumbbells, Calf Raise Machine, or Box

Target Muscles: Calves

Stand straight, holding dumbbells or use a calf raise machine. Raise your heels by pushing down on the balls of your feet. Lower and repeat. Alternatively, stand straight on a box while supporting yourself on the balls of your feet. Allow your heels and midfoot to drop down in a controlled motion, then lift yourself back up by the balls of your feet.

9. Leg Extensions

Equipment Needed: Leg Extension Machine

Target Muscles: Quads

Sit in the leg extension machine, hook your ankles under the pad and extend your legs straight. Return to the starting position slowly. Make sure to use an appropriate weight to avoid kicking or jerking the weights up. Only use a weight that allows you to use also and controlled movements.

10. Romanian Deadlifts

Equipment Needed: Barbell

Target Muscles: Hamstrings, Glutes, Lower back, Core

Stand with feet hip-width apart, holding a weighted barbell in a standing position (unlike regular deadlifts, Romanian deadlifts start in a standing position). Hinge at the hips while only slightly bending the knees and lowering the barbell towards the floor. Return to starting position.

11. Hip Thrusts

Equipment Needed: Bench and Barbell

Target Muscles: Glutes, Hamstrings, Core

Sit on the ground with a bench behind you and a barbell over your hips. Brace your shoulders against the bench and thrust your hips upward. At the top of the motion, your thighs and torso should be in line and parallel to the ground. Make sure that the bench is secure and won’t slide away as you lift with weight on your hips. Lower and repeat. Extend your calves until you are on the tips of your toes at the height of the movement to bring your calves into the mix.

12. Hack Squats

Equipment Needed: Hack Squat Machine

Target Muscles: Quads, Glutes, Hamstrings, Calves

Stand in the hack squat machine with your shoulders under the pads. Push up slightly to disengage the safety latches, then lower yourself into a squat and then push back up to the starting position. Be careful not to add so much weight that you cannot push yourself back up and get stuck in the machine.

13. Front Squats

Equipment Needed: Barbell

Target Muscles: Quads, Glutes, Hamstrings, Core, Upper back

Hold a barbell in front of you at shoulder height. Have your elbows pointed forward, and balance the barbell on your shoulders. Perform a squat, keeping your chest up and spine neutral. Return to starting position.

14. Sumo Deadlifts

Equipment Needed: Barbell

Target Muscles: Hamstrings, Glutes, Inner Thighs, Lower back, Core

Stand with a wide stance, toes pointing outward, and hold a barbell with your hands shoulder width apart. Your knees should be bent and your torso slightly tilted forward. Simultaneously straighten your legs and move into an upright standing position. Return to starting position.

15. Plyometric Box Jumps

Equipment Needed: Plyometric Box

Target Muscles: Quads, Glutes, Hamstrings, Calves, Core

Stand in front of a box of about knee height. Bend your knees, then jump onto the box by pushing off the ground with both feet. When you land, stand up into a straight and neutral position, then jump backwards onto the ground. IMPORTANT NOTICE: make sure that the box you are using is secure or on a non-slip mat. You could seriously injure yourself if the box slips when you land on it.

16. Zercher Squats

Equipment Needed: Barbell

Target Muscles: Quads, Glutes, Hamstrings, Core, Upper back

Hold a barbell in the crook of your elbows. Perform a squat, keeping your back straight and chest up. Your knees should be pointing outward as you dip into the squat. Return to the starting position.

17. Good Mornings

Equipment Needed: Barbell

Target Muscles: Hamstrings, Glutes, Lower back, Core

Hold a barbell on your shoulders, behind your neck. Bend at the hips and knees to lower your torso forward, keeping your legs, neck, and back straight. Return to start.

18. Single-Leg Romanian Deadlifts

Equipment Needed: Dumbbell or Kettlebell

Target Muscles: Hamstrings, Glutes, Core, Lower back

Stand upright with a dumbbell or kettlebell in one hand. Plant the opposite foot firmly on the ground, keeping a slight bend in the knee. Engage your core and hinge at the hips while extending the leg backwards, maintaining a straight line from heel to head. Keep your back straight and the weight close to your body, then return to the starting position.

19. Pistol Squats

Equipment Needed: None

Target Muscles: Quads, Hamstrings, Glutes, Core

Stand on one leg and extend the other leg forward. Lower into a squat on the standing leg, keeping the other leg extended. As you lower yourself, you might lose balance if you are unfamiliar with this motion. Extending your arm in front of you might help you keep your balance. Return to start and switch legs.

20. Sled Push

Equipment Needed: Sled

Target Muscles: Quads, Glutes, Hamstrings, Calves, Core, Upper body

Stand behind a weighted sled, lean forward, and grip the handles. Push the sled as fast as you can while maintaining a straight back.

Safety tips for exercising leg muscles

Safety really is a priority when working out your leg muscles. A lot of leg exercises involve heavy weights, often held or balanced high above your centre of gravity. Other exercises, like plyometric box jumps, require you to jump onto a platform. Both of these examples could potentially lead to serious back or neck injuries when safety advice is ignored. In the best-case scenario, an accident while exercising your legs will lead to stiff and sore legs and a bit of trouble walking up stairs. The worst-case scenario could be catastrophic.

1. DO NOT overload yourself when using weights

This is arguably the easiest way to seriously injure yourself in the gym. Trying to manhandle a weight above your capabilities, especially when held up high like when you’re doing front squats or good mornings, could easily cause you to lose your balance and result in you on the floor with a heavy weight crashing into your back or neck. Don’t risk it!

2. Warm up to avoid injury

Some of the biggest muscle groups in your body are found in the legs. Putting these muscles (and joints for that matter) under strain without warming them up with a few minutes of light aerobic exercise or stretching is a good way to cut your session short and having to ask for help getting up or down some stairs.

3. Ask for help to perfect your form

As with other muscles in the body, the key to seeing the best results is good form. Unlike a bicep curl, for example, incorrect form when performing deadlifts or front squats could end up with you being unable to move and might even end up with you being hospitalised with a spinal injury. As mentioned before, leg exercises often employ much greater weights than exercises targeting the arms or chest, and good form can help you move these weights safely and productively. Don’t assume that your form is perfect from day one. Ask someone, preferably an experienced and qualified trainer, to help critique your form, offer advice, and work out safely.

4. Avoid developing DOMS if you’re new to fitness

It can be very tempting to see how much you can calf raise or deadlift when you’re new to working out. Unfortunately, muscles unaccustomed to exercise could easily develop DOMS (delayed-onset muscle soreness) or muscle fever. While this isn’t life-threatening, being so sore that you can’t walk or perform normal functions is a miserable experience that could put you off exercise for a bit and delay your progress. Take your first few leg day workout sessions easy and build up your strength over time.

Getting the most out of leg day

Leg muscle groups are largely comprised of slow-twitch muscle fibres. These are small muscle fibres with a high concentration of mitochondria and myoglobin, low ATPase levels, and high oxidative capacity. This makes them slow to fatigue, helping us walk, run, and cycle for hours on end without tiring. While this evolutionary development is critical to our day-to-day lives, it has one serious implication when trying to bulk them up – it slows down muscle growth and development.

Building strong and muscular legs takes time. Even the most dedicated gym-goer who gets enough sleep, rest, and optimum nutrition can’t expect overnight results. To get the most out of leg day, Studio Society recommends spending some time with a personal trainer who can provide you with up-to-date and personalised workouts, and advice on scheduling and nutrition.

Please feel free to look at our personal trainer page to schedule an obligation-free consultation with one of our many experienced and qualified personal trainers to get the most out of your workouts and blast through your goals.

The 20 Best Leg Exercises For Muscle And Strength | Studio Society (1)

Studio Society

Studio Society is the UK’s No1 immersive gym experience. Combining sight, sound and smell to create the perfect training conditions for every workout. Offering cardio, strength and conditioning training and over 250 classes Studio Society is the perfect place to train whatever your fitness goals.

The 20 Best Leg Exercises For Muscle And Strength | Studio Society (2024)

FAQs

What is the best exercise for seniors to strengthen their legs? ›

Top 10 Leg Exercise for Seniors
  1. Seated Leg Extensions. Seated leg extensions are perfect for beginners and can be done anywhere. ...
  2. Ankle Circles. Ankle circles improve flexibility and circulation, reducing the risk of injuries and falls. ...
  3. Chair Squats. ...
  4. Standing Knee Lifts. ...
  5. Calf Raises. ...
  6. Side Leg Raises. ...
  7. Toe Taps. ...
  8. Leg Curls.
Jan 9, 2024

How do you build muscle and strength in your legs? ›

The 20 Best Leg Exercises For Muscle And Strength
  1. Bodyweight Squats. Equipment Needed: None. ...
  2. Leg Press. Equipment Needed: Leg Press Machine. ...
  3. Step-Ups. Equipment Needed: Box or Step. ...
  4. Lunges. Equipment Needed: None. ...
  5. Lying Leg Curl. Equipment Needed: Leg Curl Machine. ...
  6. Goblet Squats. ...
  7. Bulgarian Split Squats. ...
  8. Calf Raises.

How do I get super lean and toned legs? ›

10 exercises for toned legs
  1. Squats. The squat is one of the best exercises to tone legs. ...
  2. Lunges. Lunges work your thighs, butt, and abs. ...
  3. Plank leg lifts. Regular planks target the upper body, core, and hips. ...
  4. Single-leg deadlifts. ...
  5. Stability ball knee tucks. ...
  6. Step-ups. ...
  7. 7. Box jumps. ...
  8. Speedskater jumps.
Nov 16, 2023

What exercise hits all legs? ›

When it comes to designing an effective leg workout, simpler is better. The basic lower body movements — squats, hip hinges (deadlifts), and lunges — should comprise the majority of your programming. These movements inherently focus on the major muscle groups of the legs: the glutes, quads, hamstrings, and calves.

Can weak legs be strengthened? ›

Resistance Training — Resistance training with free weights or weight machines is a great way to improve leg strength and add an extra kick to the latter stages of your run and walk.

How can I get better legs at 60? ›

Exercises to try at home
  1. Step ups. Step up a stair, alternating left foot and right foot. ...
  2. Chair squat. Stand in front of a chair and squat down slowly as if to sit down. ...
  3. Standing heel raises. Stand behind a chair with both hands on the chair back. ...
  4. Standing toe raises. ...
  5. Single leg balance.
Feb 7, 2023

How can I build my legs after 50? ›

Movements like squats, hip hinges, lunges, and pushups work larger groups of muscles while engaging your joints. They are particularly useful for people over the age of 50. Are you using weights or resistance bands? Try increasing the length of time that you perform an exercise or stretch the bands.

Should seniors do leg lifts? ›

Leg lifts are extremely beneficial to the muscles in your legs, lower back, buttocks, hips and thighs. All of those areas are targeted in this one simple exercise!

Are 3 exercises enough for legs? ›

Sets And Reps Necessary for A Leg Workout:

3-to 5 exercises per leg workout are enough. After selecting workouts, complete 3 sets of 8-12 reps of each exercise. It ensures that you are working your muscles for fatigue, not failure.

What exercises build leg strength? ›

Squats are a useful exercise to build leg strength, and they're recommended for beginners. Here's how you do a goblet squat: Hold your preferred dumbbell, kettlebell, or other weight with both hands at chest level. Place your feet shoulder-width distance.

What helps your legs get stronger? ›

These steps will properly prepare your body for the workout and help you burn more calories.
  • Incline treadmill.
  • Lunge and reach.
  • Lateral lunge.
  • Kettlebell deadlift.
  • Seated leg extensions.
  • Seated leg curls.
  • Downward-facing dog.
  • Standing quad stretch.

What is the best exercise to get your legs in shape? ›

Cardio exercises such as running and cycling will help you to burn calories and build endurance. Strength-training exercises, such as squats and lunges, will help you to build muscle in your legs and strengthen them.

How to strengthen leg muscles for seniors? ›

Calf raises are one of the best leg strengthening exercises for seniors. To do them, stand straight and rise on the toes as high as possible, keeping your heels off the ground. Then slowly return to your normal position. This can help you walk on uneven ground and improve your overall health.

How to tone legs quickly? ›

8 Suggestions for Toned Legs
  1. Squats. The squat is perhaps the best exercise for your entire set of leg muscles. ...
  2. Single-leg deadlifts. ...
  3. Step-ups. ...
  4. Resistance band leg press. ...
  5. Walk, Jog, Climb stairs. ...
  6. Cycling. ...
  7. Dance. ...
  8. Jump Rope.
May 4, 2022

What is the number 1 best exercise? ›

Walking and hiking: Walking is one of the best cardio exercises out there because it can be done almost anywhere and with little equipment. All you need is a pair of comfortable, sturdy shoes. If you're just starting out, walk 5-10 minutes per day and work your way up to 30 minutes or more per day.

What is number 4 leg exercise? ›

Figure 4 Stretch
  • Lie on your back with knees bent, feet flat and in line with your hips.
  • Bring either ankle to the opposite knee forming a figure four (i.e. cross your legs)
  • Reach through your bent knee and grasp the back of the leg still on the ground and pull it towards your chest.
Feb 23, 2021

What is the best order to train legs? ›

How To Build a Beginner Leg Workout Routine
  1. A 10-minute warm-up on the treadmill or elliptical.
  2. Bodyweight squats – Three sets of 10 reps.
  3. Lunges– Three sets of 10 reps.
  4. Leg press – Three sets of 10 reps.
  5. Leg curls – Three sets of 10 reps.
  6. A five to 10-minute cool-down doing stretches or an ab workout.
May 11, 2023

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Chrissy Homenick

Last Updated:

Views: 6111

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (74 voted)

Reviews: 89% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Chrissy Homenick

Birthday: 2001-10-22

Address: 611 Kuhn Oval, Feltonbury, NY 02783-3818

Phone: +96619177651654

Job: Mining Representative

Hobby: amateur radio, Sculling, Knife making, Gardening, Watching movies, Gunsmithing, Video gaming

Introduction: My name is Chrissy Homenick, I am a tender, funny, determined, tender, glorious, fancy, enthusiastic person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.