Exercises Legs Front Squat

Front Squat: Correct Form & Working Weight

Quads primary Barbell, Squat Rack Intermediate Compound · Legs

The front squat holds the barbell across the front of the shoulders, forcing a more upright torso than back squats. This shifts emphasis to the quads and demands significant core strength and upper back mobility. A staple for Olympic lifters and quad development.

Front Back
Quadsprimary
Glutes, Core, Upper Backsecondary

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Front Squat Video Tutorial

Video tutorial coming soon

How to Do the Front Squat

  1. Set the bar in a squat rack at upper chest height. Step in and position the bar across the front of your shoulders — it rests on the deltoids, not in your hands.
  2. Front rack grip: elbows high and forward, fingertips under the bar. If wrist mobility is limited, use a cross-arm grip (arms crossed, hands on top of the bar).
  3. Unrack by standing tall. Step back. Feet shoulder-width, toes out 15-30 degrees. Elbows stay HIGH — this keeps the bar from rolling forward.
  4. Brace hard. Squat by pushing hips back and bending knees. The upright torso is automatic — if you lean forward, the bar falls.
  5. Descend to parallel or below. Keep elbows high the entire time. Drive up by pressing through your full foot. Stand tall.

Front Squat Mistakes to Avoid

Elbows dropping — the most common front squat fail. If elbows drop, the bar rolls forward and the lift is lost. Cue: drive elbows to the ceiling.
Rounding the upper back — the bar will fall. Keep chest up and upper back tight. If you can't maintain position, reduce weight.
Not going deep enough — the front squat rewards depth. The upright torso makes deep squatting safer than back squats. Go as deep as mobility allows.
Gripping the bar too tight — the bar sits on your shoulders, not in your hands. Fingertips only. A death grip on the bar means your wrists will suffer.

Front Squat Muscles Worked

The front squat is the most quad-dominant barbell squat due to the upright torso. The quads extend the knee, glutes extend the hip, and the core and upper back work overtime to maintain the front rack position. Less hamstring and lower back stress than back squats.

Front Squat Alternatives

Barbell Back SquatWant to go heavier — the back squat allows more total load
Goblet SquatWant a simpler front-loaded squat for learning — dumbbell held at chest
Zercher SquatWant front-loaded squatting without wrist mobility demands
Leg PressWant quad work without the upper body demands of front squatting

Front Squat Programming

Strength
5 × 3-5
sets × reps
Rest 3-5 min
Hypertrophy
4 × 6-8
sets × reps
Rest 2-3 min
Endurance
3 × 8-12
sets × reps
Rest 90 sec

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Front Squat FAQ

Front squat vs back squat?
Front squat is more quad-dominant, requires more mobility, and is self-correcting (you can't lean forward). Back squat allows heavier loads and works more posterior chain. Most lifters benefit from doing both.
How much less can I front squat than back squat?
Typically 70-85% of your back squat. If you back squat 120kg, front squat around 85-100kg. The front rack position and quad emphasis limit the load.
Clean grip or cross-arm grip?
Clean grip (fingertips under bar, elbows high) is superior — more stable and transfers to Olympic lifts. Cross-arm works if you lack wrist mobility but is less secure. Work on clean grip mobility over time.
My wrists hurt during front squats — what do I do?
Use a cross-arm grip short term. Long term: stretch wrists daily, use wrist wraps, and practice the front rack with an empty bar. You only need 2-3 fingertips under the bar — the shoulders hold the weight, not the hands.