Split Squat
The Static Split-Stance Strength Pattern
The split squat is a lower-body exercise performed in a split stance where both feet stay planted and the movement is primarily up and down. That fixed-foot setup is a key difference from a walking/stepping lunge, and it’s one reason split squats are often easier to standardize and repeat consistently.
What This Hub Covers
- A dedicated page for proper form & technique (execution standards only)
- A strict muscles worked page (mechanics only)
- A focused benefits page (what split squats are useful for)
- A curated best variations page (including stable machine options)
- A knee pain fixes page (common triggers + practical adjustments)
- A static/machine vs walking lunge comparison page (what changes and why)
- A programming page (sets, reps, progression, and where it fits)
Split Squat at a Glance
Animated demonstration of one full squat repetition from the top to the bottom position.
Proper Form & Technique
Make every rep look the same
This page is strictly about how to perform the split squat with repeatable setup and control.
You’ll learn:
- Key setup checkpoints that keep the rep stable
- How to control depth without losing balance or shifting stress
- The clean cues that keep the movement consistent under fatigue
Muscles Worked
What’s doing the work, and what changes emphasis
This page focuses on mechanics only. In split squats, variables like step length can change joint angles and joint demands, which is one reason “muscles worked” deserves a dedicated breakdown.
You’ll learn:
- The primary contributors in the front leg
- What typically shifts emphasis between hip-focused and knee-focused demands
- Why small setup changes can make the exercise feel very different
Benefits
Where split squats fit best
This page stays outcome-focused and keeps technique and programming out of the discussion.
You’ll learn:
- What split squats are especially useful for in lower-body training
- Why the fixed-foot setup can be easier to repeat than moving-step lunges
- How split squats can complement bilateral patterns (squat/hinge)
Best Variations
Variations that actually change the stimulus
This page curates the variations that meaningfully change loading, stability, or repeatability, without turning into a long list.
You’ll learn:
- The highest-value split squat variations for different goals
- When stable machine options make progression easier to track
- Which changes are “real” stimulus changes vs just comfort changes
Knee Pain Fixes
The common triggers, and the practical adjustments
This page is for fixing the patterns that most often irritate knees during split squats, kept separate from the form page so it can stay specific.
You’ll learn:
- The most common technique and setup errors linked to knee discomfort
- Simple adjustments (stance, depth, control) that often reduce irritation
- How to keep the rep stable and predictable
Static/Machine vs Walking Lunge
Same family, different demands
This page compares what actually changes when the feet stay fixed (static split squat) versus stepping each rep (walking lunge), and how machines can alter stability and repeatability. The “fixed-foot, up-down” characteristic is a core distinction.
You’ll learn:
- Why stepping changes balance and stability requirements
- What machines standardize (and what they don’t)
- How to choose the right option based on repeatability and intent
Programming
How to apply split squats in real training
This page is strictly programming, so it doesn’t overlap with technique or benefits.
You’ll learn:
- Practical set/rep approaches for different goals
- How to progress load and volume without form drift
- How split squats fit alongside squats, hinges, and hip thrusts
