Exercise Overview

Step-ups are a functional exercise that directly translates to climbing stairs—one of the most common challenges after ACL surgery. They build single-leg quad strength, hip control, and balance while progressively loading your surgical leg.

Why Step-Ups Are Essential

  • Functional: Directly mimics stair climbing
  • Single-leg loading: Addresses asymmetries
  • Progressive: Easy to adjust difficulty with step height
  • Quad focus: Excellent quad strengthener
  • Balance: Challenges stability on one leg

How To Perform

1

Set Up

Stand facing a step, box, or stair. Start with a low height (4-6 inches) and progress higher as strength improves. Have something nearby for balance support if needed.

2

Place Your Foot

Place your surgical leg on the step with your entire foot flat. The step should be high enough that your knee is bent to about 60-90 degrees.

3

Step Up

Push through your heel and straighten your leg to step up. Focus on using your lead leg—don't push off with your back leg. Keep your torso upright.

4

Control at the Top

Stand fully upright on the step. Pause briefly to ensure you have balance and control.

5

Step Down

Slowly lower your back leg to the floor with control. This eccentric phase is just as important as stepping up—don't just drop down.

6

Watch Your Knee

Throughout the movement, keep your knee tracking over your toes—not collapsing inward.

Common Mistakes

Pushing Off Back Foot

Using your back leg to push up defeats the purpose. All the work should come from the leg on the step.

Knee Valgus

Letting your knee collapse inward is common when fatigued. Stop or lower the step height if this happens.

Step Too High

Starting with too high a step compromises form. Master lower heights before progressing.

Dropping Down Fast

Control the descent. The lowering phase builds strength and protects your knee.

Leaning Forward

Keep your torso upright. Excessive forward lean shifts stress and reduces quad engagement.

Sets, Reps & Frequency

Phase Step Height Sets Reps Frequency
Week 6-8 4-6 inches 2-3 8-10 each leg Daily
Week 8-12 6-8 inches 3 10-12 each leg Daily
Month 3-6 8-12 inches 3 10-15 each leg 3-4x/week
Month 6+ 12+ inches / weighted 3-4 10-12 each leg 2-3x/week

Variations & Progressions

Forward Step-Up

Standard version: face the step and step up. Focus on quadriceps.

Beginner

Lateral Step-Up

Stand beside the step and step up sideways. Great for hip abductors and frontal plane strength.

Intermediate

Step-Up with Knee Drive

At the top, drive your back knee up to hip height. Adds balance challenge and hip flexor work.

Intermediate

Weighted Step-Up

Hold dumbbells at your sides or a barbell on your back. Significantly increases strength demand.

Advanced

Step-Down (Eccentric Focus)

Start on the step and slowly lower yourself down. Excellent for eccentric quad control.

Intermediate

Box Step-Up (High Box)

Use a higher box (knee height or above). Requires more strength and ROM.

Advanced