Squat
The Foundational Knee-and-Hip Extension Pattern
The squat is a multi-joint lower-body exercise where you lower into hip and knee flexion and stand back up by producing hip and knee extension while keeping the trunk braced. Small changes in torso angle, shin angle, stance, and depth can meaningfully change the external demands at the hip and knee, so the squat is best treated as a movement pattern with clear, controllable variables (not one “perfect” style).
What This Hub Covers
- A dedicated page for proper form & technique (execution standards only)
- A strict muscles worked: glutes vs quads page (mechanics only)
- A focused benefits page (what squats are useful for, and what they aren’t)
- A curated best variations page (free weights and stable machine options)
- A common mistakes & knee pain page (error patterns + fixes)
- A programming page (how to apply squats in real training)
Squat at a Glance
Animated demonstration of one full squat repetition from the top to the bottom position.
Proper Form & Technique
Clear setup standards for repeatable reps
This page is strictly about execution, so your squat looks the same from set to set as load increases.
You’ll learn:
- Setup checkpoints that keep balance over the midfoot
- Bracing and torso control that keep the rep clean
- Depth and consistency standards (without mixing in programming)
Muscles Worked (Glutes vs Quads)
What shifts emphasis, and why
This page focuses on mechanics only: how squat variables change hip vs knee demands and why that changes where you “feel” the lift. Research reviews show that trunk and tibia orientation influence hip and knee moments, and that depth and technique variables can change joint demands and muscle recruitment.
You’ll learn:
- How the squat distributes work across the lower body
- Why torso angle and shin angle shift hip vs knee demand
- How depth can change demands (and why results vary between lifters)
Benefits
What the squat pattern is especially useful for
This page stays outcome-focused and avoids mixing technique or programming into the benefits.
You’ll learn:
- What squats develop well (and what they’re not designed to do)
- Why squats remain a staple lower-body strength pattern
- How squat style choices connect to different training outcomes
Best Variations
The variations that meaningfully change the lift
This page is a curated selection of variations that change mechanics, comfort, or repeatability, without becoming a giant list.
You’ll learn:
- Which variations change joint demands in meaningful ways
- When stable machine squats can be a smart choice for consistent
- positioning and progression tracking
- How to choose variations without drifting away from the purpose of the squat pattern
Common Mistakes & Knee Pain
The errors that usually irritate the knees first
This page focuses on common breakdown patterns and the simplest fixes, kept separate from form and biomechanics so it stays practical.
You’ll learn:
- The most common technique errors linked to knee irritation in squatting
- Setup and control adjustments that typically reduce symptoms
- How to keep squat reps consistent as fatigue increases
Programming
How to apply squats in real training
This page is strictly about programming, how to use the squat pattern for different goals without turning technique into a moving target.
You’ll learn:
- How to think about sets/reps/intensity for different outcomes
- How to manage fatigue so the technique stays stable
- How variation choice affects weekly squat volume and recovery
