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Box Squat

A foundational squatting movement using a box for support, emphasizing controlled 4-second lowering and 2-second pauses. Builds strength for downhill hiking by teaching proper glute-initiated movement patterns and eccentric muscle control.

5 min
Beginner
Strength

Box Squat (Eccentric Focus)

What it does: Builds foundational squatting strength with controlled lowering and rising phases. The eccentric (lowering) component is especially valuable for downhill hiking, where your muscles work hard to control your descent.

Setup:

  • Use a box, bench, or sturdy surface at a comfortable height
  • Stand with feet hip-width apart or slightly wider
  • Slight outward rotation of toes for stability
  • Squeeze glutes and maintain three points of contact on each foot (big toe, pinky toe, heel)
  • Hold arms out front for balance, keeping shoulders stable

Movement:

  1. Initiate with your glutes - sit back toward the box rather than bending knees first (this determines where the load goes)
  2. Lower for 4 seconds - control the descent, maintaining tension through your legs
  3. Touch and pause - lightly contact the box and hold for 2 seconds
  4. Rise for 2 seconds - pull back with hamstrings while pushing forward with glutes to return to standing

Key cues:

  • Keep that "two hand rule" - glutes move back first
  • Knees track over your first and second toes
  • Don't let knees collapse inward or drift too far outward
  • Your torso will lean forward naturally - aim to keep it roughly aligned with your shin angle
  • Maintain core tension throughout the movement

Modifications:

  • Adjust box height based on your mobility and comfort
  • If you're limited by knee sensitivity, focus on the glute-first movement pattern
  • As you improve, work toward getting your hips parallel to the ground

Progression: Once you can comfortably perform this movement with hips reaching parallel, you're ready to progress to air squats without the box.

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