Legs

Glute Bridge

The foundation glute isolation lift — reduces lower back pain, improves posture, the gateway to hip thrust.

3D animation — watch the full movement

Primary Muscles

Gluteus maximus (main glute)

Secondary Muscles

Hamstrings, erector spinae (lower back), core

Equipment

None / Optional: resistance band, dumbbell

Location

Home / Gym

Difficulty

Beginner

How to Do It

  1. Lie on your back. Knees bent at 90°, feet planted, feet hip-width apart.
  2. Hands at your sides, palms down. Neck and shoulders relaxed, chin slightly tucked.
  3. Drive through your heels to lift the hips. Shoulders-hips-knees form one straight line. Don't over-arch the lower back.
  4. Squeeze at the top for 2 seconds — actively contract the glutes. Core engaged to protect the spine.
  5. Lower in control (2 sec) to the start. You can keep the hips off the floor between reps for constant tension.

Common Mistakes

  • Hyper-extending the lower back at the top — back pain.
  • Lifting from the lower back instead of the glutes — primary target is lost.
  • Pushing through the toes — cuts glute activation by half. Push through the heels.
  • Reps too fast — momentum weakens hypertrophy signal.
  • No squeeze at the top — peak contraction is critical.

Beginner Tips

  • First 2 weeks bodyweight only, 15 reps × 3 sets. Focus on form.
  • If you can't feel the glutes: place your fingers on a glute mid-set and feel the contraction.
  • Profile view in a mirror helps verify the straight line.
  • Single-leg bridge is the ideal progression — keep the other leg straight in the air.

Frequently Asked Questions

Glute bridge vs hip thrust — what's the difference?

Same muscles, but hip thrust starts from a bench and gives a bigger ROM. Bridge is beginner, hip thrust is progression. Hit 20 × 3 sets of bridges before moving on.

How many reps should I do?

Hypertrophy: 12-15 × 3-4. Endurance: 20-25 × 3. Weighted bridge: 8-12 × 3. Glutes have high endurance fibres and respond well to higher reps.

Is it good for lower back pain?

Yes — physios use it as rehab. Weak glutes = back pain (lower cross syndrome). Stronger glutes offload the spine. But if you have active pain, see a clinician first.

Related Exercises

Lunge

The most practical leg exercise for home and gym — quads, glutes and hamstrings worked in one move.

Bulgarian Split Squat

The highest quad+glute hypertrophy signal in a single-leg lift — the asymmetric king of squats.

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