There's no shame in wanting to build powerful, defined muscles. But if that's your goal, you may find yourself prioritizing the muscles you see in the mirror — your abs, quads, pecs and biceps, for instance — while skipping over those you can't easily view. Most often, that means neglecting to train the major movers on the back of your body.
Strengthening these muscles, which make up your posterior chain, is essential to keeping your joints safe, maintaining a healthy posture and performing at your best. Ahead, experts break down the importance of a strong posterior chain, plus how to train it with seven exercises.
Video of the Day
What Is the Posterior Chain?
It may sound like a complicated piece of anatomy, but the posterior chain refers to all of the muscles that run along the back side of your body, from your neck down to your heels, says Leada Malek, DPT, CSCS, a board-certified sports specialist and physical therapist. Specifically, the posterior chain includes the following major muscles, among others:
- Levator scapulae
- Traps
- Posterior deltoids
- Rhomboids
- Lats
- Rotator cuff muscles
- Triceps
- Erector spinae
- Glutes
- Hamstring muscles
- Calf muscles
On the flip side, your anterior chain consists of the muscles that line the front side of your body, including those on the inside of your forearms, your biceps, your pecs, your abdominals, your hip flexors and your quads, Malek tells LIVESTRONG.com.
These muscles all work together to perform various functions throughout your body, which is where the "chain" component of the term comes from.
"Everything is linked and functions together — many of these muscles have multiple actions across the posterior side [of the body]," Malek says. Your hamstrings, for example, not only play a role in bending your knee, but they also extend your hip, she says.
Why Is the Posterior Chain Important?
Most people tend to have stronger anterior chain muscles than posterior chain muscles because many daily activities — sitting at a desk, driving a car, walking the dog, climbing up the stairs — call on those muscles, Malek says. But it's important to keep both the front and back sides of your body in balance, she adds. Here's why.
1. It Improves Performance and Daily Functioning
The muscles in your posterior chain are some of the strongest in your entire body, and they help drive power-focused movements, such as the hang clean and back squat, says Analisse Ríos, CPT, CSCS, a certified strength and conditioning coach.
"With a strong posterior chain, you're going to have more power, be able to run faster and be more agile," Ríos tells LIVESTRONG.com.
Your glutes and hamstrings, for instance, help propel you forward while sprinting and lift heavy while deadlifting, Malek adds. So the stronger these muscles are, the better you'll perform in your sport or at the gym.
But a strong posterior chain can also ensure you're moving effectively in your everyday life. You need strong glutes and hamstrings to properly control your hips, while powerful lats, which assist in shoulder extension, can improve the efficiency of pulling motions, according to Malek.
"Our day-to-day life requires these muscles to stay strong," Malek says. "In order to build that capacity to sustain movement, you definitely need to address those [posterior chain] muscles."
2. It Reduces Injury Risk
Keeping the strength of your anterior and posterior chains in balance plays a key role in injury prevention, according to the experts. If you're a runner with stronger quads than hamstrings, for instance, you may have a greater risk of developing a hamstring injury, according to Malek.
"If you have limited ability to control your knee extension from the posterior chain muscles [due to weakness], the hamstring muscle will be overloaded, so you run the risk of a strain," Malek says.
Because the muscles on the back side of your body are essential to stabilizing lower-body joints, "any time you see a knee or hip injury, it's probably a weak posterior chain issue happening," Ríos says.
3. It Supports Healthy Posture
To ensure you sit and stand upright and slouch-free, a strong posterior chain is key. When you prioritize chest exercises, like bench presses, but neglect moves that target your lats, rhomboids and other upper-back muscles, your posture can become worse for the wear, according to the experts.
"As the pecs get stronger, they pull everything forward, and their lats aren't strong enough to pull your shoulder blades back, so you slouch over a little bit," Ríos says. "You definitely need a balance of both of those for good posture."
How to Train Your Posterior Chain
The easiest way to ensure you hit all of your posterior chain muscles is to program two full-body workouts each week, allowing for at least 48 hours of recovery time between workouts, according to the experts. Ríos, who trains collegiate and professional athletes, prefers to do one workout consisting of upper-body "pushing" exercises (such as bench presses and triceps dips) and lower-body "pulling" exercises (such as deadlifts and good mornings).
For the second workout, she focuses on upper-body pulling exercises (think: pull-ups and biceps curls) and lower-body pushing moves (think: glute bridges and quad extensions). Aim to complete three to four sets of three to five reps for each exercise you program.
That said, don't be afraid to sprinkle posterior chain moves into all of your workouts, Ríos says. "The way you can do that is by starting with a power block, because a lot of the posterior chain movements are full-body, power movements," she explains. "At the start of my workouts, I include the hang clean — you need that strong posterior chain to bring that bar up as fast as possible — and med ball slams, as you're using that posterior chain to slam that ball into the ground or wall."
Regardless of how you program your posterior chain exercises, remember to include an exercise or two that targets the muscle group that's relevant to your sport or goals, such as hamstring curls if you're a runner, Malek suggests.
Related Reading
The 7 Best Exercises to Train Your Posterior Chain
If you're wondering, how do I fix a weak posterior chain, you're ready to start building up your posterior chain strength, correcting your posture and reducing your risk of injury. So, try some of Malek's favorite moves, which she demonstrates below.
1. Romanian Deadlift
- Stand with your feet hip-width apart, your toes pointed slightly out to the sides and your arms hanging in front of your thighs. Hold a dumbbell in each hand with your palms facing toward you.
- Draw your shoulders down and back and engage your core and lats. Keep your arms straight. On an inhale, slowly send your hips back and bend your knees slightly to lower the dumbbells to the floor.
- Continue pushing your hips back until the dumbbells are as close to the floor as possible or you feel a stretch in your hamstrings. Keep your neck neutral and gaze forward throughout the movement.
- On an exhale, push through your feet and drive your hips forward to return to standing, making sure to keep your chest raised throughout the movement.
2. Calf Raise
- Stand with your feet hip-width apart, your toes pointed forward and your hands resting on your hips.
- Engage your core, then on exhale, press your toes into the floor and lift your both heels off the ground as high as possible.
- On an inhale, slowly lower your heels back to the floor to return to the starting position.
3. Bent-Over Row
- Stand with your feet hip-width apart, your toes pointed forward, and your arms hanging at your sides. Hold a dumbbell in each hand with your palms facing your legs.
- Engage your core and draw your shoulders down and back. Then, bend your knees slightly and hinge at your hips until your torso is leaning forward about 45 degrees. Allow your hands to hang below your shoulders. Your back should be flat, neck neutral, and palms facing toward one another.
- On an exhale, engage your lats and drive your elbows up toward the ceiling behind you until they're in line with your ribcage. Keep your elbows tucked close to your sides and back flat throughout the movement.
- Pause, then on an inhale, slowly straighten your arms to lower the dumbbells to the floor and return to the starting position.
4. Glute Bridge
- Lie on your back with your arms resting by your sides, knees bent and feet flat on the ground hip-width apart. Your feet should be close enough to your hips that if you reach one hand at a time toward each heel, you can just touch it with your fingertips.
- Relax your arms alongside your body. Think of your shoulders being "glued" to the floor to help keep your spine neutral.
- Squeeze your glutes and core, and press your heels into the ground to drive your hips up toward the ceiling until you form a diagonal line from knees to hips to chest. Resist the urge to arch your lower back as you raise your hips. Focus on keeping your spine in a neutral position throughout.
- Hold this position for a few seconds with your glutes engaged.
- Slowly lower your glutes back to the floor to return to the starting position.
Related Reading
5. Bird Dog
- Start in a table-top position on the floor with your wrists stacked with your shoulders, your knees stacked with your hips and the tips of your toes resting on the floor.
- Engage your core and draw your shoulders down and back.
- On an exhale, lift your left hand off the floor and extend your left arm out in front of you until it's in line with your left shoulder. Simultaneously, lift your right foot off the floor and extend your right leg out behind you until it's in line with your right hip. Keep your back flat, your core engaged, and your hips square with the floor.
- On an inhale, slowly lower your left hand and right knee back to the floor to return to the starting position. Then, repeat the move on the opposite side.
6. Single-Leg Romanian Deadlift
- Stand with your feet hip-width apart, your toes pointed forward, your left arm hanging at your side and your right arm hanging in front of your right leg. Hold a dumbbell in your right hand with your palm facing toward you.
- Draw your shoulders down and back and engage your core and lats. Then, shift your body weight into your left leg and rest the tips of your right foot's toes on the floor.
- On an inhale, keeping your right arm straight and left arm out at your side, bend your left knee slightly and send your hips back to lower the dumbbell to the floor. Continue pushing your hips back until the dumbbells are as close to the floor as possible or you feel a stretch in your hamstrings. Keep your neck neutral and gaze forward throughout the movement.
- On an exhale, push through your left foot and drive your hips forward to return to standing, making sure to keep your chest raised.
7. Reverse Fly
- Stand with your feet hip-width apart, your toes pointed forward and your arms hanging at your sides. Hold a dumbbell in each hand with your palms facing toward your legs.
- Engage your core and draw your shoulders down and back. Then, bend your knees slightly and hinge at your hips until your torso is leaning forward about 45 degrees. Allow your hands to hang below your shoulders. Your back should be flat, neck neutral, and palms facing toward one another.
- On an exhale, squeeze your shoulder blades together and drive the dumbbells up toward the ceiling at your sides until they're in line with your shoulders. Keep your elbows slightly bent and back flat throughout the movement.
- Pause, then on an inhale, slowly lower your arms back to the starting position.