Exercises Legs Belt Squat

Belt Squat: Correct Form & Muscles Worked

Quads, Glutes primary Belt Squat Machine or Dip Belt + Plates Intermediate Compound · Legs

The belt squat loads the legs through a belt around the hips instead of a bar on the back, completely eliminating spinal compression. It's the only squat variation that trains the quads and glutes heavily while giving the spine a total break.

Front Back
Quads, Glutesprimary
Hamstringssecondary

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Belt Squat Video Tutorial

Video tutorial coming soon

How to Do the Belt Squat

  1. On a belt squat machine: strap the belt around your hips and attach to the loading mechanism. On a DIY setup: wear a dip belt with weight, stand on two boxes with a gap between for the weight to hang.
  2. Stand tall. Feet shoulder-width apart on the platform.
  3. Squat down by pushing hips back and bending knees. The weight pulls from your hips — your spine is completely unloaded.
  4. Descend to parallel or below. Without spinal compression, you can often squat deeper and more comfortably.
  5. Drive up to standing. Squeeze glutes at the top.

Belt Squat Mistakes to Avoid

Leaning too far forward — the hip loading wants to pull you forward. Stay upright and push hips back.
Belt too loose — the belt must be snug around the hips so the load transfers properly. Loose belt = uneven loading.
Standing on an unstable surface (DIY setup) — if using boxes, make sure they're solid and won't shift. Safety first.
Ignoring this variation — most lifters walk past the belt squat machine. It's one of the most useful tools for high-volume leg work without fatiguing the back.

Belt Squat Muscles Worked

The belt squat targets quads and glutes identically to a back squat but with ZERO spinal compression. The load hangs from the hips, not the shoulders. This makes it perfect for high-volume leg work, deload phases, or lifters with back issues.

Belt Squat Alternatives

Barbell Back SquatWant the standard barbell squat — more total body recruitment but loads the spine
Leg PressWant machine leg work without spinal load — similar benefit
Hack SquatWant machine squatting with back support
Goblet SquatWant a simple front-loaded squat — some spinal load but minimal

Belt Squat Programming

Strength
4 × 6-8
sets × reps
Rest 2-3 min
Hypertrophy
3 × 8-12
sets × reps
Rest 90 sec
Endurance
3 × 12-20
sets × reps
Rest 60 sec

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Belt Squat FAQ

Why is zero spinal load important?
Heavy squats and deadlifts compress the spine. On high-volume leg days or when your back is fatigued, the belt squat lets you train legs hard without adding more spinal stress. This means faster recovery and more leg volume.
Can I DIY a belt squat?
Yes — wear a dip belt loaded with plates, stand on two sturdy boxes or benches with a gap between for the plates to hang. Works well but is less comfortable than a dedicated machine.
Does every gym have a belt squat machine?
No — they're becoming more common but are still mainly in powerlifting and well-equipped gyms. The DIY dip belt version works in any gym.
Belt squat vs leg press?
Both remove spinal load. Belt squat maintains the standing squat pattern (more functional). Leg press allows heavier absolute loads. Belt squat is generally preferred for the squat-specific carryover.