Exercise Overview
Lunges are a fundamental single-leg exercise that builds strength, balance, and movement quality needed for running, cutting, and sport. They challenge your quad, glute, and hip stability in a way that mimics real-world activities.
Why Lunges Are Important
- Single-leg strength: Each leg works independently
- Hip stability: Challenges balance and control
- Sport-specific: Mimics running and cutting positions
- Functional: Translates to climbing, reaching, lifting
- Versatile: Many variations for different goals
Timing Matters
Most protocols introduce lunges around month 3-4 when you have good quad strength and knee control. Start with static lunges or split squats before progressing to dynamic variations. Get clearance from your PT before starting.
How To Perform (Forward Lunge)
Starting Position
Stand with feet hip-width apart, hands on hips or at sides. Core engaged, chest up, shoulders back.
Step Forward
Take a controlled step forward with your surgical leg (or alternate). Land heel first, then flatten foot.
Lower Down
Bend both knees to lower your body. Front thigh approaches parallel to ground. Back knee hovers just above the floor.
Check Alignment
Front knee should track over toes (not caving in or going too far forward). Torso stays upright.
Push Back
Drive through your front heel to push back to standing. Control the movement—don't just fall back.
Common Mistakes
Knee Caving In
The most important thing to avoid. Push your knee out over your toes. If you can't control this, go back to easier exercises.
Knee Over Toes
While some forward knee travel is fine, excessive forward movement increases patellofemoral stress.
Leaning Forward
Keep your torso upright. Leaning forward shifts load and reduces glute involvement.
Too Narrow Stance
Feet too close together (front to back) challenges balance excessively. Take a decent step.
Rushing
Control the movement. Fast lunges often mean poor form. Quality over quantity.
Sets, Reps & Progression
| Phase | Variation | Sets | Reps | Frequency |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Month 3-4 | Split Squat (static) | 2-3 | 8-10 each leg | 3x/week |
| Month 4-5 | Reverse Lunge | 3 | 10-12 each leg | 3x/week |
| Month 5-6 | Forward Lunge | 3 | 10-12 each leg | 2-3x/week |
| Month 6+ | Walking Lunge / Weighted | 3-4 | 10-15 each leg | 2-3x/week |
Lunge Variations
Split Squat (Static Lunge)
Feet stay in place—just move up and down. Start here to learn the pattern without the step.
BeginnerReverse Lunge
Step backward instead of forward. More control, less deceleration stress. Good progression before forward lunges.
IntermediateForward Lunge
Step forward into lunge, then push back. More challenging than reverse due to deceleration demands.
IntermediateWalking Lunge
Continuous forward lunges, alternating legs. Great for conditioning and sport preparation.
Intermediate-AdvancedLateral Lunge
Step to the side rather than forward/back. Excellent for adductor strength and lateral movement prep.
IntermediateBulgarian Split Squat
Rear foot elevated on bench. Significantly increases single-leg demand. Great for addressing asymmetries.
AdvancedWeighted Lunges
Add dumbbells at sides or barbell on back once bodyweight lunges are easy with good form.
AdvancedLunge with Rotation
Add torso rotation at the bottom to challenge core stability. Great for sport-specific training.
Advanced