how to front squat
Front squats are a barbell squat variation where the bar rests on the front of your shoulders instead of your back, which emphasizes the quads and keeps your torso more upright.
Quick Scoop: What Is a Front Squat?
- Barbell sits across the front of your shoulders (front rack), under your chin, above the collarbones.
- You squat down with a tall chest and high elbows, then stand back up, driving through your midfoot.
- Compared with back squats, front squats usually feel more quad-heavy and a bit lighter in load but easier on the lower back.
Setup: Rack, Bar, and Stance
1. Rack and bar height
- Set the J-hooks around midâchest to midâshoulder height so you can un-rack without calf-raising onto your toes.
- Walk up so the bar touches the base of your throat and rests on the meat of your shoulders, not on your neck.
2. Hand and grip options
Common grips (pick what mobility allows):
- Clean/front rack grip:
- Hands just outside shoulder width.
- Fingertips under the bar, elbows driven high so upper arms are roughly parallel to the floor.
- Crossâarm grip:
- Arms crossed, each hand pressing the bar into the opposite shoulder.
- Straps grip:
- Loop straps around the bar, hold the straps while keeping elbows up (good if wrists are tight).
Key principle: The bar is supported by your shoulders and torso , not gripped tightly in your hands.
3. Foot position
- Step back 1â2 short steps from the rack, feet about hipâ to shoulderâwidth apart.
- Toes turned out slightly (about 10â30 degrees) so knees can track over toes.
- Midfoot balancedâheel, big toe, and little toe all pressing the floor.
StepâbyâStep: How to Front Squat
1. Before you descend
- Take a deep belly breath and brace your core like youâre about to be lightly punched.
- Lift your chest, keep elbows high, and squeeze shoulder blades slightly down and back to create a âshelfâ for the bar.
2. The descent
- Initiate by breaking at hips and knees at the same time, sitting âdown and slightly backâ like going into a chair.
- Keep:
- Chest up
- Elbows up
- Knees tracking in line with toes (no caving inward)
- Stay balanced over midfoot and descend until at least thighs are parallel to the floor; go deeper if you can while staying tight and upright.
3. The ascent
- From the bottom, push the floor away by driving through your midfoot (heel, big toe, little toe).
- Lead with your chest and elbowsâthink âdrive elbows to the ceilingâ as you stand.
- Squeeze glutes at the top, stand tall, but avoid hyperextending your lower back.
Common Mistakes and Fixes
1. Elbows dropping
- Problem: Elbows drop, bar rolls forward, you feel like youâre going to dump it.
- Fixes:
- Use lighter weight and focus on keeping elbows as high as possible throughout the rep.
* Improve thoracic (upperâback) mobility and wrist flexibility over time.
2. Torso collapsing / falling forward
- Problem: Chest falls, hips shoot up first, looks like a âgood morning.â
- Fixes:
- Reduce the weight and think âchest up, elbows upâ the whole time.
* Strengthen core and upper back with frontârack holds, planks, and rows.
3. Knees caving in
- Problem: Knees buckle toward each other.
- Fixes:
- Cue: âPush the floor apartâ or âspread the floor with your feet.â
* Use lighter load and pause sets to practice clean knee tracking over toes.
4. Bar on the neck or choking sensation
- Problem: Feels like the bar is in your throat.
- Fixes:
- Raise your elbows and puff your upper chest forward to create a muscular shelf on the front delts.
* Check bar path: it should sit close to the neck but actually rest on shoulders/clavicles.
Programming Tips and Variations
Starting out
- Start with an empty bar or even goblet squats (holding a dumbbell or kettlebell at your chest) to learn the upright squat pattern.
- Begin with 3â4 sets of 5â8 reps, focusing on clean technique, then gradually add weight week by week.
Popular variations
- Goblet front squat: Great for beginners and mobility.
- Pause front squat: 1â3 second pause at the bottom to build tightness and control.
- Front squat vs back squat: Front squats shift more load to the quads and typically feel easier on the lower back but harder for upperâback/core; back squats usually allow heavier loads overall.
What Lifters Say Online (Forum Vibe)
- In /r/weightroom, a longârunning âHOW TO: Front Squatâ thread has lifters trading cues like âelbows to the skyâ and debating whether front squats can replace back squats entirely.
- Some posters report better quad growth, cleaner technique, and less back stress with fronts, while others keep them as an accessory lift to boost backâsquat strength.
Simple Beginner Progression (Example)
- Week 1â2: Goblet squats 3Ă8â10, 2â3 times per week.
- Week 3â4: Light barbell front squats 4Ă5, focusing on bar position and elbow height.
- Week 5+: Add 2.5â5 kg when all reps feel solid and you can keep an upright torso and high elbows every set.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.