Leg Extension Mistakes to Avoid
Machine pivot misaligned with knees — the machine's axis of rotation must line up with your knee joint. Wrong alignment stresses the knee.
Hyperextending at the top — stop just short of full lockout. Slamming into extension stresses the knee joint.
Using momentum — swinging the weight up. Slow, controlled reps with a squeeze at the top.
Going too heavy — this is isolation. The quads should burn, not your ego. Moderate weight with strict form and a hold at the top.
Leg Extension Muscles Worked
The leg extension isolates the quadriceps (all four heads) through pure knee extension. No other muscle contributes. It's the only exercise that trains the quads without any hip extension, making it uniquely effective for quad isolation and the rectus femoris specifically.
Leg Extension FAQ
Are leg extensions bad for your knees?
For healthy knees, no — when done with controlled form and appropriate weight. The 'leg extensions are bad' myth is outdated. They're actually used in knee rehab. Issues arise from excessive weight, hyperextension, or pre-existing conditions.
Leg extensions vs squats?
Different tools. Squats are a compound that works the full leg. Leg extensions isolate the quads specifically. Use squats as your primary, extensions as your isolation finisher.
Full range or partial reps?
Full range — from at least 90° knee bend to near-full extension. Partial reps have their place (e.g., holding at the top for isometric work) but full range builds more muscle.
How many sets of leg extensions per week?
4-8 sets as part of your total quad volume. They're an accessory — do them after your squats and compound leg work.