January 13, 2026

10 min read

Leg Exercises for Women with Upper Body Limitations

By Will Duru, BSc (Hons) Sport and Exercise Science, Award winning Personal Trainer with over 10 years of experience in strength training

Your legs are strong enough. Your upper body is not.

This is one of the most frustrating problems I see with women in the gym. You want to train your legs hard. You want to build your glutes and quads. But every exercise seems to require your arms, back, or grip to hold the weight.

Squats require you to support a barbell on your upper back. Lunges need you to hold dumbbells at your sides. Romanian deadlifts demand grip strength to hold the bar. Split squats have you clutching dumbbells until your forearms burn.

Your legs could do more. But your upper body gives out first.

I have worked with dozens of women who faced this exact problem. The solution is not to accept weaker leg training. The solution is to work around your upper body limitations using smarter exercise choices, equipment modifications, and grip aids.

This guide shows you exactly how to do it.

Romanian Deadlift (RDL) Form: Complete Guide for Women

Why This Problem Is So Common in Women

Women typically have less upper body strength relative to their lower body compared to men. This is simple physiology. Women tend to carry more muscle mass in their lower body while men carry more in their upper body.

This means that for many women, the legs are capable of handling significantly more weight than the arms, back, or grip can support.

Common scenarios I see:

  • You can squat 60kg but struggle to hold a 40kg barbell in position because your upper back fatigues
  • Your glutes could handle heavier Romanian deadlifts but your grip fails after 8 reps
  • Split squats with 12kg dumbbells burn your forearms before your legs feel challenged
  • Goblet squats are limited by how long you can hold the dumbbell against your chest

This is not a weakness. It is a mismatch between what your legs can do and what your upper body can support. The good news is that there are many ways to work around it.

Machine Exercises That Remove Upper Body Demands

The simplest solution is to use machines that support the weight for you. These exercises let your legs work to their full potential without your upper body being the limiting factor.

Leg Press

The leg press is the ultimate upper body free leg exercise. You sit in the machine, place your feet on the platform, and push. Your arms do nothing except hold the safety handles.

Why it works for you:

  • Zero grip requirement
  • No upper back fatigue
  • No core stability demands
  • You can load your legs as heavy as they can handle

How to perform it:

  1. Sit in the machine with your back flat against the pad
  2. Place feet shoulder width apart on the platform
  3. Release the safety catches
  4. Lower the weight by bending your knees towards your chest
  5. Push through your heels to extend your legs
  6. Do not lock your knees completely at the top

Recommended sets and reps:

Goal

Sets

Reps

Rest

Muscle building

4

12, 10, 10, 8

90 seconds

Strength

4

8, 6, 6, 6

120 seconds

The leg press can handle very heavy weight. Women who struggle with 40kg squats often leg press 100kg or more once the upper body is removed from the equation.

Leg Exercises for Women with Upper Body Limitations: How to Build Strong Legs When Your Grip or Arms Give Out First

Hack Squat Machine

The hack squat provides a squat pattern without requiring you to support a barbell. Your shoulders rest against pads and your back is supported by the machine.

Why it works for you:

  • Shoulder pads hold the weight, not your arms
  • Back is fully supported
  • No balance requirements
  • Targets quads intensely

How to perform it:

  1. Stand on the platform with shoulders under the pads
  2. Feet shoulder width apart, slightly forward on the platform
  3. Release the safety handles
  4. Lower by bending your knees until thighs are parallel or below
  5. Push through your feet to stand back up

Recommended sets and reps:

Goal

Sets

Reps

Rest

Muscle building

4

10, 10, 8, 8

90 seconds

Strength

4

8, 6, 6, 6

120 seconds

Leg Extension

Leg extensions isolate your quadriceps completely. You sit in a machine and extend your legs against a pad. Your upper body does nothing.

Why it works for you:

  • Complete isolation of quads
  • Zero upper body involvement
  • Great for pre exhausting legs before compounds
  • Excellent for finishing leg workouts

How to perform it:

  1. Adjust the machine so your knees align with the pivot point
  2. Place ankles behind the lower pad
  3. Extend your legs until straight
  4. Lower with control
  5. Do not swing or use momentum

Recommended sets and reps:

Goal

Sets

Reps

Rest

Muscle building

3

15, 12, 12

60 seconds

Pre exhaust

2

20, 20

45 seconds

Leg Exercises for Women with Upper Body Limitations: How to Build Strong Legs When Your Grip or Arms Give Out First

Leg Curl (Lying or Seated)

Leg curls isolate your hamstrings. Whether lying face down or seated, your upper body simply rests while your legs do the work.

Why it works for you:

  • Complete hamstring isolation
  • No grip or arm involvement
  • Can go heavy without upper body limitation
  • Balances quad dominant training

How to perform it (lying):

  1. Lie face down on the machine
  2. Place ankles under the pad
  3. Curl your heels towards your glutes
  4. Squeeze at the top
  5. Lower with control

Recommended sets and reps:

Goal

Sets

Reps

Rest

Muscle building

3

12, 10, 10

60 seconds

Strength

3

10, 8, 8

90 seconds

Lying Leg Curl, 12reps app, strength training and weightlifting app

Hip Thrust Machine

Many gyms now have dedicated hip thrust machines. These eliminate the need to set up a barbell and hold it in position.

Why it works for you:

  • No barbell to balance
  • No pad to hold in place
  • Direct glute loading
  • Easy to load heavy

If your gym has one, use it. If not, see the section below on how to make barbell hip thrusts work.

Leg Exercises for Women with Upper Body Limitations: How to Build Strong Legs When Your Grip or Arms Give Out First

Cable Kickbacks and Pull Throughs

Cable machines let you train glutes and hamstrings with minimal upper body involvement.

Cable kickback:

  • Attach ankle strap
  • Hold the frame lightly for balance only
  • Kick leg back against resistance
  • Focuses on glutes

Cable pull through:

  • Stand facing away from cable
  • Reach between legs to grab rope attachment
  • Hinge at hips and stand up using glutes and hamstrings
  • Grip is minimal, mostly glute and hamstring work

Equipment That Helps Your Grip

When you cannot avoid holding weight, grip aids can extend how long you can hold on.

Lifting Straps

Lifting straps wrap around your wrist and then around the bar. They transfer the load from your fingers to your wrist, dramatically reducing grip demands.

Best for:

  • Romanian deadlifts
  • Dumbbell Romanian deadlifts
  • Barbell rows (which also train legs isometrically)
  • Any pulling movement where grip fails first

How to use them:

  1. Slip your hand through the loop so the strap hangs from your wrist
  2. Wrap the loose end around the bar
  3. Grip the bar with the strap wrapped underneath your hand
  4. The strap now holds the weight, not just your fingers

Straps let many women add 10 to 20kg to their Romanian deadlifts instantly because grip is no longer the limiting factor.

Lifting Chalk

Chalk dries your hands and increases friction between your skin and the bar. This improves grip without any wrapping or straps.

Best for:

  • Moderate grip improvement
  • When you want to train grip but need a little help
  • Hot or humid gyms where hands get sweaty
  • Any barbell or dumbbell work

How to use it:

  • Apply to palms and fingers before your set
  • Rub hands together to distribute
  • Reapply between heavy sets
  • Liquid chalk is less messy and allowed in more gyms

Chalk typically adds a few reps before grip failure. Straps add many more. Use chalk for lighter work and straps for your heaviest sets.

Versa Gripps or Similar Products

Versa Gripps are a hybrid between straps and gloves. They wrap quickly and release easily while providing excellent grip support.

Advantages:

  • Faster to use than traditional straps
  • More secure than chalk alone
  • Easy to release between sets
  • Durable and long lasting

These are more expensive than basic straps but many women find them worth the investment for convenience.

Modified Free Weight Exercises

Sometimes you want or need to use free weights. Here are modifications that reduce upper body demands.

Barbell Hip Thrust with Pad

The barbell hip thrust is the best glute exercise but requires holding a barbell across your hips.

How to reduce upper body involvement:

  • Use a thick barbell pad to reduce discomfort
  • Rest your upper back on a bench so you do not need to support yourself
  • Let the weight rest in your hip crease, hands are just for guidance
  • Your arms do not lift the weight, they only keep it from rolling

Once set up correctly, your arms do almost nothing during the movement itself.

Smith Machine Squats

The Smith machine guides the bar on a fixed path. This removes the need to balance and reduces upper back demands.

Why it works:

  • Bar is supported by the machine
  • Less upper back strength needed
  • Can focus entirely on leg drive
  • Safety catches allow you to fail safely

The Smith machine is not identical to free squats but it lets you load your legs when barbell squats are limited by upper body fatigue.

Goblet Squat with Squat Wedge

If goblet squats are limited by how long you can hold the dumbbell, try elevating your heels on a squat wedge. This allows a more upright torso, reducing how far forward the weight pulls.

Why it works:

  • More upright position reduces arm fatigue
  • Weight stays closer to your centre of mass
  • Less strain on holding position
  • Can often use heavier weight

Belt Squat

If your gym has a belt squat machine, this is perfect for your situation. The weight hangs from a belt around your hips. Your upper body does nothing except stay upright.

Why it works:

  • Zero upper body loading
  • No grip requirement
  • No spinal compression
  • Pure leg training

Belt squats are becoming more common in commercial gyms. Ask your gym if they have one.

Sample Leg Workout for Women with Upper Body Limitations

Here is a complete leg workout designed to maximally challenge your legs while minimising upper body demands.

Warm Up

ExerciseSetsReps
Bodyweight squat215
Leg swing (front to back)110 each leg
Leg swing (side to side)110 each leg

Main Workout

ExerciseSetsRepsRestNotes
Leg Press412, 10, 10, 890 secondsGo heavy, no upper body limit
Hack Squat or Smith Machine Squat310, 10, 890 secondsFocus on depth
Romanian Deadlift with Straps310, 10, 890 secondsStraps eliminate grip limit
Leg Extension315, 12, 1260 secondsSqueeze at top
Lying Leg Curl312, 10, 1060 secondsControl the negative
Hip Thrust (machine or barbell)312, 10, 1060 secondsPause at top
Standing Calf Raise315, 15, 1245 secondsFull range of motion

This workout hits quads, hamstrings, glutes, and calves without your upper body being the weak link.

How to Progress When Upper Body Is Limiting

Even with these modifications, you should still work on improving your upper body strength over time. Here is how to approach it.

Short Term: Work Around It

Use the machine exercises and grip aids to train your legs hard now. Do not let upper body limitations hold back your leg development.

Medium Term: Build Upper Body Alongside

Include upper body training in your programme. As your back, shoulders, and grip get stronger, more exercise options open up.

Grip specific exercises:

  • Farmer carries (start light)
  • Dead hangs from a pull up bar
  • Plate pinches
  • Wrist curls

Upper back exercises:

  • Seated rows
  • Lat pulldowns
  • Face pulls
  • Reverse flyes

Long Term: Reintroduce Free Weight Compounds

As your upper body catches up, gradually add back the exercises that were previously limited. You might find that barbell squats and dumbbell lunges become viable options.

This is a process. It takes months

Tracking Your Progress

Use the 12REPS app to track all your leg workouts. The app shows your previous weights and reps for each exercise so you can see progress over time.

Because you are using different exercises than a standard programme, tracking becomes even more important. You need to know that your leg press is increasing, your hack squat is progressing, and your leg curls are getting stronger.

The app also includes video demonstrations for every exercise mentioned in this guide. If you are unsure how to perform a movement, watch the demonstration before your set.

Best strength training app | gym and home workout planner

Common Questions

Will machines build muscle as well as free weights?

Yes. Muscle growth depends on progressive overload and mechanical tension, not whether the weight is a barbell or a machine. Machines can build just as much muscle when used correctly.

Should I feel embarrassed using straps?

Absolutely not. Straps are a tool. Professional powerlifters and bodybuilders use them regularly. They allow you to train your target muscles harder. That is their purpose.

Will my grip ever catch up to my legs?

For most women, there will always be some gap because of how muscle is distributed. But your grip can improve significantly with direct training. The gap will narrow even if it never fully closes.

Can I build glutes without hip thrusts?

Yes. Leg press with feet high on the platform, cable pull throughs, cable kickbacks, and Romanian deadlifts all build glutes effectively. Hip thrusts are excellent but not the only option.

What if my gym does not have these machines?

Work with what you have. Most gyms have at least a leg press and leg curl. If not, focus on the grip aids (straps, chalk) to make free weight exercises more accessible.

References

  1. Schoenfeld, B.J. et al. (2021). Resistance Training Recommendations to Maximize Muscle Hypertrophy in an Athletic Population. Strength and Conditioning Journal. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33867777/
  2. Krings, B.M. et al. (2016). Effects of Grip Width on the Myoelectric Activity of the Prime Movers During the Flat Barbell Bench Press. Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26840437/
  3. Vigotsky, A.D. et al. (2015). Effects of load on good morning kinematics and EMG activity. PeerJ. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26339555/

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About the Author: Will Duru holds a BSc (Hons) in Sport and Exercise Science and is an award-winning personal trainer with over 10 years of experience. He has helped dozens of women overcome upper-body limitations to build strong, powerful legs. Will created the 12REPS app to provide exercise alternatives and video demonstrations for every situation.

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12Reps Team

The 12reps app is your ultimate fitness companion, crafting tailored workout plans, tracking your progress, and keeping you motivated every step of the way. Whether you’re at home, in the gym, or on the go, our adaptable approach fits seamlessly into your lifestyle — providing the support and guidance you need to crush your goals and stay on track.

Disclaimer: The ideas in this blog post are not medical advice. They shouldn’t be used for diagnosing, treating, or preventing any health problems. Always check with your doctor before changing your diet, sleep habits, daily activities, or exercise.  JUST12REP.COM  isn’t responsible for any injuries or harm from the suggestions, opinions, or tips in this article.

Leg Exercises for Women with Upper Body Limitations: How to Build Strong Legs When Your Grip or Arms Give Out First
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