Exercises Legs Good Morning

Good Morning: Correct Form & Working Weight

Hamstrings, Lower Back primary Barbell Intermediate Compound · Pull

The good morning is a barbell hip hinge with the bar on your back, bowing forward and standing back up. It's one of the most effective exercises for strengthening the hamstrings, glutes, and erector spinae — but demands respect for proper technique.

Front Back
Hamstrings, Lower Backprimary
Glutes, Coresecondary

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Good Morning Video Tutorial

Video tutorial coming soon

How to Do the Good Morning

  1. Set a barbell across your upper back in a squat position — high bar or low bar, whichever you prefer. Stand with feet shoulder-width apart.
  2. Brace your core hard. Unlock your knees with a slight bend — keep this bend fixed throughout the movement.
  3. Push your hips straight back and bow forward, keeping the bar on your back and your spine neutral. The movement is a hip hinge, not a back bend.
  4. Hinge forward until you feel a strong hamstring stretch — typically when your torso reaches about 45-70 degrees from vertical. Don't go further than your hamstrings allow with a flat back.
  5. Drive your hips forward to return to standing. Squeeze your glutes at the top.

Good Morning Mistakes to Avoid

Rounding the lower back — the most dangerous mistake. If your back rounds, you've gone too deep or the weight is too heavy. Reduce range or weight immediately.
Bending the knees too much — more knee bend turns it into a squat. Keep a slight fixed bend — the movement is from the hips.
Going too heavy — good mornings are not a max-out exercise. Use 30-50% of your squat weight. The stimulus comes from the stretch, not the load.
Looking up — cranes the neck under load. Keep your gaze forward and slightly down as you hinge.

Good Morning Muscles Worked

The good morning targets the hamstrings through a deep eccentric stretch, the erector spinae isometrically to maintain spinal position, and the glutes to drive the hip extension back to standing. It's a top-tier posterior chain developer.

Good Morning Alternatives

Romanian DeadliftWant a similar hip hinge with the bar in your hands instead of on your back — generally considered safer
Stiff-Leg DeadliftWant maximum hamstring stretch with the bar in front
HyperextensionWant lower back work without a barbell on your back
Cable Pull-ThroughWant a cable hip hinge that's easier to learn and lighter on the spine

Good Morning Programming

Strength
4 × 5-8
sets × reps
Rest 2-3 min
Hypertrophy
3 × 8-12
sets × reps
Rest 90 sec
Endurance
3 × 12-15
sets × reps
Rest 60 sec

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Good Morning FAQ

Are good mornings safe?
Yes, when performed with appropriate weight and strict form. The key is using moderate weight (30-50% of squat), maintaining a neutral spine, and only hinging as far as your hamstring flexibility allows. They're a staple of powerlifting and athletic training.
Good mornings vs Romanian deadlifts?
Very similar muscles, different bar position. RDLs have the bar in your hands (more hamstring, less spinal loading). Good mornings have the bar on your back (more erector demand, more stretch). Both are excellent — RDLs are generally easier to learn.
How heavy should good mornings be?
30-50% of your back squat is the standard recommendation. If you squat 120kg, good morning with 40-60kg. This is not a max-effort exercise. The stimulus comes from the controlled stretch.
When should I do good mornings?
After your main compounds (squats, deadlifts). They're an accessory for posterior chain development, not a primary movement. 3-4 sets of 8-12 reps is standard.