Exercise Overview
The leg press is an excellent machine-based exercise for building quad strength after ACL surgery. It allows you to load your legs in a controlled environment with adjustable resistance and range of motion.
Why Leg Press Works Well for ACL Rehab
- Controlled environment: Machine guides movement path
- Adjustable ROM: Limit depth to protect graft early on
- Scalable resistance: Start light, progress over months
- Bilateral or unilateral: Can work both legs or single-leg
- Safe loading: No balance demands or fall risk
Range of Motion Guidelines
In early phases, limit your leg press ROM to protect your graft:
- Weeks 6-8: 0-60° knee flexion
- Weeks 8-12: 0-70° knee flexion
- Month 3+: Progress toward full ROM (0-90°+)
Follow your surgeon's and PT's specific guidelines for your graft type.
How To Perform
Adjust the Machine
Set the seat back position so your knees are at the appropriate starting angle (based on your ROM restrictions). Your lower back should be flat against the pad.
Foot Position
Place feet shoulder-width apart on the platform, toes pointing slightly outward. Position feet in the middle or slightly higher on the platform.
Unrack and Prepare
Release the safety handles and straighten your legs (don't lock out completely). This is your starting position.
Lower with Control
Slowly bend your knees to lower the platform toward you. Stop at your prescribed ROM limit (e.g., 60° knee bend). Don't let your lower back round off the pad.
Press Up
Push through your heels (not toes) to extend your legs. Keep knees tracking over toes—don't let them cave inward.
Don't Lock Out
Stop just short of full knee lock at the top. This keeps tension on the muscles and protects the joint.
Common Mistakes
Going Too Deep Too Soon
Early in recovery, deep leg press increases graft stress. Stick to your prescribed ROM limits.
Knees Caving In
Keep knees aligned with toes. If they cave in, reduce weight or stop.
Locking Out Knees
Hyperextending at the top is unnecessary and potentially harmful. Stop just before lockout.
Butt Coming Off Seat
If your lower back rounds and butt lifts off, you're going too deep for your mobility.
Too Much Weight Too Soon
Start light and progress slowly. The goal is building strength, not testing max.
Sets, Reps & Progression
| Phase | ROM | Sets x Reps | Weight | Frequency |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Week 6-8 | 0-60° | 2-3 x 10-12 | Light | 2-3x/week |
| Week 8-12 | 0-70° | 3 x 10-15 | Moderate | 2-3x/week |
| Month 3-4 | 0-80° | 3 x 10-12 | Progressive | 2-3x/week |
| Month 4+ | Full (0-90°+) | 3-4 x 8-12 | Progressive | 2-3x/week |
Start with a weight you can control for all reps with perfect form. Progress by 5-10% when the current weight becomes easy.
Variations
Bilateral Leg Press
Both legs working together. Standard version—start here.
BeginnerSingle-Leg Press
One leg at a time to address asymmetries. Use lighter weight (less than half of bilateral).
IntermediateHigh Foot Position
Feet higher on platform emphasizes glutes and hamstrings more than quads.
VariationLow Foot Position
Feet lower on platform emphasizes quads. Be careful with knee stress.
VariationNarrow Stance
Feet closer together—more quad dominant.
VariationWide Stance
Feet wider apart—more adductor and glute involvement.
Variation