Mobility training is a bit like eating your vegetables. You don’t particularly want to, but your parents insist — “you need them to grow up big and strong,” they probably said. As it turns out, they were right.
If strength training is the meat and potatoes of your exercise routine, mobility exercises are your “micronutrients”. The right mobility work can help preserve bodily function, stave off injury, and also improve your performance. (1) Don’t buy it? Here’s licensed Doctor of Physical Therapy Eugene “Bo” Babenko:
“In my line of work, I’ve seen so many injuries come down to the client not working through a full range of motion,” Babenko says, which means being flexible enough to access those ranges and strong enough to control them. That’s why you need mobility training — here are 12 of Dr. Bo’s favorite exercises for mobility.
12 Best Mobility Exercises, From a DPT
Single-Arm Kettlebell March + Reverse Lunge
Recent Updates: This list of mobility exercises was revamped on Mar. 1, 2024, by BarBend Senior Writer Jake Dickson in a collaboration with Colorado-based Doctor of Physical Therapy Eugene “Bo” Babenko. Babenko is a veteran clinician with years of experience helping athletes of all levels remedy injuries and improve their quality of life both in and out of the gym.
Editor’s Note: The content on BarBend is meant to be informative in nature, but it should not be taken as medical advice. When starting a new training regimen and/or diet, it is always a good idea to consult a trusted medical professional. We are not a medical resource. The opinions and articles on this site are not intended for use as diagnosis, prevention, and/or treatment of health problems. They are not substitutes for consulting a qualified medical professional.
1. Crocodile Breathing
“Deep belly breathing is the ultimate way to start any training session,” says Babenko. This rhythmic breathing technique will not only regulate your nervous system and prepare your mind for the workout to follow, but also serves as some introductory practice to proper abdominal bracing.
How To Do It
Lie face-down on the floor and cross your arms in front of you, placing your forehead on the back of your palms.
Exhale fully until you feel your torso empty of air.
Inhale slowly and deeply, thinking about filling your body with air from your chest to your tailbone.
2. Single-Leg Supine Leg Raise
According to Babenko, grounded core exercises like the leg raise are a phenomenal way of utilizing what’s called reciprocal inhibition — activating one muscle to signal an opposing muscle that it’s okay to relax. This move will train your core and may help improve hamstring flexibility.
How To Do It
Lie on your back with one buttcheek scooted up against the pillar of a squat rack or door frame.
Hike that leg up with your knee locked until you feel a stretch in your hamstring.
Lift your shoulders off the floor slightly and compress your ribcage to activate your abs.
With the other leg’s knee locked, gradually lift it until it aligns with your suspended leg and then slowly lower it back down.
3. Single-Arm Kettlebell March + Reverse Lunge
“This drill provides great ‘return-on-investment’ for the hips, and is one I personally do almost every morning,” Babenko says. The standing marches will actively engage your core and hip flexors, while the reverse lunges will then lengthen those tissues for a balanced stimulus.
How To Do It
Rack a kettlebell on one side of your body in the front rack position.
Brace your core and hold your non-working arm out to the side or at your hip for balance.
Perform standing marches, bending your knee and lifting it up to waist height, alternating legs.
Then, step backward into a reverse lunge position, alternating legs once again.
4. 90/90 Hip Rotation
For Babenko, “owning” a joint’s full range of motion is everything. You can use the 90/90 hip rotation to develop active control over both of your hip joints simultaneously. “The internal rotator muscles of the hip are hard to access and control for most,” Babenko says.
How To Do It
Sit on the floor with your knees bent and tucked up to your chest.
Sweep your right knee down and push your right foot out and around behind you, pulling that hip into internal rotation.
Open the other leg and place the outside of that knee on the ground.
Both of your legs should be on the floor, knees bent at 90 degrees each.
Reverse the motion, switching hip positions slowly using your hip muscles.
5. Thoracic Foam Rolling
“Undoing the damage from the day”, as Babenko calls it, is one of the best ways to improve overall performance and ensure proper shoulder function. Thoracic foam rolling pulls your spine into extension, lengthening your abs, pecs, and anterior shoulder muscles in the process, which may grow tight after long periods of sitting or slouching.
How To Do It
Sit down with the foam roller up against your tailbone and your legs either straight out in front of you or bent at the knee.
Slowly “slide” down into a supine position, until you’re either leaning fully against the roller or are arched over it with your upper back on the ground as well.
Identify trigger points or painful areas in your mid or upper back and roll back and forth over them, breathing deeply.
6. Cossack Squat
Think of Cossack squats as a single-leg mobility exercise that also enhances stability and control. This move is also excellent for stretching out the insides of your thighs if you have trouble opening your hips.
How To Do It
Stand in a wide sumo stance with your knees locked and your toes pointing slightly outward.
Extend your arms in front of your body or cross them at your chest.
Slowly push your hips back and sideways, sinking into a squat position on one side while using your other leg as a kickstand for balance.
Reverse the motion, return to the starting position, and then squat deep into the opposing side.
7. Shoulder CAR
In physiotherapy, “CAR” stands for “controlled articular rotation” — a fancy way of rotating a limb around a fixed point. The shoulder CAR takes your shoulder through its full range of motion and, according to Dr. Babenko, is one of the best ways to improve shoulder mobility.
How To Do It
Take a half-kneeling position adjacent to a wall. The leg closest should the wall should be your “down” leg.
For extra stability, place a foam roller between the inside of your “up” knee and the wall.
Extend your wall-side arm out along the wall with your elbow straight.
Slowly glide your arm up the wall in an arc motion, passing your head and extending behind your body.
8. Sciatic Nerve Floss
Babenko remarks that this is a particularly good mobility exercise for runners, skiers, or anyone who may mistakenly believe that they have tight hamstrings when the underlying cause may be neural in nature. Nerve “flossing” refers to performing a dynamic stretch that mobilizes neural tissue and treats associated symptoms. (2)
Editor’s Note: If you’re experiencing nerve-related pain or conditions like severe tingling or numbness, consult with a doctor right away.
How To Do It
Stand upright with a staggered stance, placing one foot a few inches in front of the other, making contact with the ground with only your heel.
Hinge forward, dropping your head towards your forward foot without bending your knees.
As you drop down, actively sweep your arms forward as though you were scooping up the air.
9. Dead Hang
“Accumulating time in a hanging position has all sorts of benefits,” Babenko says. Namely, dead hangs both improve shoulder mobility while also providing some axial decompression — they allow gravity to apply very mild traction to your spine, countering the compressive forces applied by moves like the squat or overhead press. Oh, and you’ll also get a free grip exercise along the way.
How To Do It
Reach up and grab ahold of a stable horizontal bar with a shoulder-width, overhand grip.
Slowly suspend yourself from the bar, hanging freely without swaying.
Allow your shoulders to pull upward towards your ears as you hold your lower body motionless.
10. Banded Hip Mobilization
Babenko notes that one of the most common restrictions he sees in his practice is limited hip extension and internal rotation. “Using a heavy band to get the hip opened up with some overhead reaching incorporated is something I use with almost 90% of my clientele,” he says, as a way of stretching out a tight anterior chain.
How To Do It
Tie a heavy resistance band around a stable structure like the frame of a squat rack at around knee height.
Place one leg into the loop of the band, then hike it upward into your groin. The band should wrap around directly under your buttcheek.
Take a knee, placing the banded knee on the floor and your opposite foot flat in front of you.
Allow the band to pull your hip into extension until you feel a strong stretch along the front of your thigh.
11. Kang Squat
The ability to breathe in the bottom of a squat position is key to proper posture and bracing, Babenko says. By incorporating a hip hinge as well, you can loosen your posterior chain and warm up your entire lower body at once.
How To Do It
Unrack an empty barbell and place it on your upper back as you would for a back squat.
Assume your standard squat stance, then hinge backward into a deep good morning position.
From the hinged position, sink your butt down and drive your knees forward to fall into the bottom of a deep squat.
Pause, exhale, then reverse the motion, deliberately shooting your hips up and back until you’re in the hinged position once again.
12. Kettlebell Windmill
Your shoulder blade sits flush against the back of your ribcage and is the most mobile area in your upper body, which means there’s a large range of motion you need to stabilize. The kettlebell windmill not only stretches your posterior chain, but requires you to isometrically contract your upper back and shoulder girdle to suspend a weight overhead in the process.
How To Do It
Hold a kettlebell above your head with one arm and take a staggered stance with your legs slightly out of alignment.
Maintaining a locked elbow in your upper arm, slowly and gradually tilt your torso to one side, reaching down toward the floor with your other arm.
Lower yourself until you can touch the floor or until you feel a strong stretch throughout your hip and lower back.
How To Track Mobility Training Progress
People often mistakenly think of mobility exercises as a type of fitness band-aid — something you apply to heal an issue and then discard. But the reality is that mobility training is training, and you need to progressively overload it the same way to see real results.
[Read More: The 7 Best Foam Roller Exercises for Mobility and Better Movement]
If you’re wondering how to track your mobility progress over time, there are a few ways to go about it. Ask yourself these questions:
Can you access more of your range of motion without the assistance of a partner or from a weight?
Are movements or actions that were once restricted or uncomfortable now tolerable or easy?
Do you experience less discomfort in positions that were once challenging to maintain?
You can, in some cases, also measure your mobility progress more literally. Common mobility screens like shoulder dislocations with a PVC pipe or the knee-to-wall test for ankle dorsiflexion may apply. However, the best way to measure your mobility over time is to work through a progressive plan under the guidance of a qualified clinician.
3 Mobility Workouts To Try
If you’re struggling with your mobility, even the best exercises in the world only get you halfway there; you need to know how to organize them into mobility workouts of their own.
Mobility Warm-Up
If you associate mobility exercises with your warm-up, you’re not wrong. So how do you warm up… for your warm-up? Research indicates that if you’re warming up with mobility exercises directly prior to your workout, you should focus on deliberate, dynamic movement. Save static stretches for after your session if you can help it. (3)
[Read More: 4 Bodyweight Warm-Up and Cool-Down Mobility Drills]
Here’s how you’d typically ease into your mobility routine at the very start of a session:
5-10 minutes light cardio on the treadmill, elliptical, stepper, or skipping rope
2-4 joint-specific mobility exercises that involve the muscles you’re using that day
Mobility Workout for Squats
Squats (and all of their variations) are some of the best leg exercises you can do, but proper squat form isn’t always easy to achieve. Mobilizing and warming up for squats at the start of your lower-body workout can make all the difference when you get under the barbell.
Mobility Workout for Beginners
Improving your flexibility is essential to hitting the ground running with a new fitness routine. To perform mobility exercises safely, you need the appropriate range of motion. A few different bodyweight exercises aimed at beginners will do the trick;
Mobility Workout for CrossFit
CrossFitters need robust mobility throughout most of their joints. Weekly WODs contain many different compound exercises or gymnastics movements that require exceptional mobility. To ensure you’re primed for performance before the clock starts running, hit this sequence:
[Read More: 4 Mini Band Exercises to Improve Your Shoulder Mobility]
Benefits of Mobility Training
If you’ve ever experienced the crush of stiff muscles, you’ll love the primary benefit of mobility training. It helps you move in a greater range of motion without so much muscle stiffness. This helps improve your overall exercise performance by ensuring that your body can handle what you’re putting it through in training.
Become a Better Athlete
The ability to change direction quickly without sacrificing speed and quickness is important for a lot of sports and daily life activities. When your muscles are less stiff, your movements are easier and smoother. This translates into better movement mechanics on and off the platform. And the more efficiently you can move, the more effective your workouts will become.
Injury Prevention
Whether you’re running, lifting, jumping, or changing directions in daily life, you’re putting a lot of stress on your joints and muscles. When a joint moves through its full ROM, it improves its ability to absorb force. Therefore, a more mobile joint is generally a safer joint.
[Read More: 5 Mobility Drills to Help You Through Lifting Sticking Points]
When your body has mobility restrictions, it will compensate and find a way to get the movement done. This leads to muscles and joints up and down the kinetic chain trying to do the work of your restricted joint. Over time, this can lead to injuries and pain.
Better Strength and Hypertrophy Potential
Having good joint mobility, including wrist mobility, ensures that you’re able to move as efficiently as possible during your lifts. You won’t be improperly compensating for small ranges of motion, so you’ll be able to channel the forces you need to lift most effectively.
When you do that, you’ll be able to move heavier loads. This ability leads to more strength and better muscle-building potential.
[Read More: 12 Wrist Mobility Drills to Do at Work and Before Lifting]
For example, if your hip mobility is limiting your squat or deadlift, you’re not strengthening all parts of the movement and leaving gains on the table. Improving mobility through mobility exercises for weightlifting is therefore a great way to get stronger without weights.
Mobility Training Tips
It’s all well and good to know that you need to do mobility training. It’s trickier to actually ensure that you’re doing it effectively. Here’s how to get started with your mobility exercises.
Exercise Selection: Prioritize exercises that match your current limitations and are connected to whatever lift you’re doing on any given day
Sets and Reps: Sets and reps vary. Generally, you’ll want to perform enough of a mobility exercise to feel a mild to moderate challenge or stretch, but not so much that you tire yourself out before a workout or irritate an existing injury.
Focus On Breathing
Whatever you do, don’t hold your breath. It’s tempting — especially if you’re panicking in a new range of motion — to stop breathing during mobility workouts. But instead, match your movements with your breath.
[Read More: How to Level-Up Your Daily Movement, According to Dr. Kelly Starrett]
Every time you inhale, imagine making your body longer. When you exhale, sink deeper into the position you’re in. This can give you something to focus on, and it will also signal to your body that it’s safe to relax into its current uncomfortable position.
Start Gradually
Even if you’re very experienced with mobility training, avoid going from zero to 60 immediately. Begin each set somewhat tentatively, and gradually — with each breath — sink into a deeper range of motion.
[Read More: 6 Stretches and Warm-ups to Improve Ankle Mobility]
The same holds true for mobility training on a macro level. Start by getting yourself acclimated to two or three movements, performed with smaller rep counts and holds. Only once you feel comfortable should you add more time, reps, and exercises to the mix. Think of it as progressive overload and ramp-up sets for mobility exercises.
Be Consistent
It might be tempting to skimp on your warm-up or your mobility-specific training sessions. If that sounds like you, try integrating mobility exercises into your rest times between strength sets. You won’t have to schedule in extra time — you’ll be taking rests in between sets anyway.
By working mobility into your rest periods, you’ll prime your muscles for the next set and make mobility training a habit. Hopefully, intra-set mobility exercises will get you increasingly comfortable with mobility training generally, such that you can integrate it into broader aspects of your fitness routine.
FAQs
Almost any exercise can be a mobility movement. However, “mobility exercises” are moves performed specifically to increase range of motion in a specific joint or help you establish better control over that range of motion without relying on external support or other muscle groups.
The best way to improve daily mobility is to move every day. As they say, motion is lotion. This can be as simple as walking every day for your lower body or as robust as following a daily mobility plan from a physical therapist.
It depends on the difficulty of the exercise, but generally yes, unless your doctor or clinician prescribes otherwise. As a rule of thumb, low-level mobility moves that don’t challenge your balance or involve external weight can be performed on a daily basis if you choose to.
References
Gabbett TJThe training—injury prevention paradox: should athletes be training smarter and harder?British Journal of Sports Medicine 2016;50:273-280.
Peacock M, Douglas S, Nair P. Neural mobilization in low back and radicular pain: a systematic review. J Man Manip Ther. 2023 Feb;31(1):4-12. doi: 10.1080/10669817.2022.2065599. Epub 2022 May 18. PMID: 35583521; PMCID: PMC9848316.
Page P. Current concepts in muscle stretching for exercise and rehabilitation. Int J Sports Phys Ther. 2012 Feb;7(1):109-19. PMID: 22319684; PMCID: PMC3273886.
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