Exercises Legs Nordic Curl

Nordic Curl: Correct Form & Progressions

Hamstrings primary Bodyweight, Anchor Point Advanced Isolation · Pull

The Nordic curl is a bodyweight hamstring exercise where you kneel and lower your body forward under control, resisting gravity with your hamstrings. The extreme eccentric loading makes it the gold standard for hamstring injury prevention — used by elite athletes worldwide.

Front Back
Hamstringsprimary
Glutes, Calvessecondary

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Nordic Curl Video Tutorial

Video tutorial coming soon

How to Do the Nordic Curl

  1. Kneel on a pad. Anchor your ankles under something heavy (partner holding them, loaded barbell, or Nordic curl bench).
  2. Start upright from the knees. Cross arms over your chest. Body straight from knees to head.
  3. Slowly lower your body FORWARD by extending at the knees. Your hamstrings resist the fall. This is the eccentric — make it as slow as possible.
  4. Lower as far as you can control — most people can only manage the top 30-50% at first. When you can't hold anymore, catch yourself with your hands.
  5. Push yourself back up with your hands to the starting position (the concentric is too hard for most people initially). That's one rep.

Nordic Curl Mistakes to Avoid

Bending at the hips — your body must stay straight from knees to head. Hip bending bypasses the hamstrings. Think 'falling forward like a plank.'
Lowering too fast — the slow eccentric IS the exercise. Lower over 3-5 seconds minimum. Fast dropping is pointless and risks hamstring strain.
Skipping this exercise because it's too hard — even partial Nordics (top 20% of range) are beneficial. Use your hands to assist. Progress over weeks.
No ankle anchor — without a solid anchor, the exercise is impossible. Invest in a Nordic curl strap or use a partner/heavy barbell.

Nordic Curl Muscles Worked

The Nordic curl eccentrically loads the hamstrings through knee flexion at extreme intensity — you're resisting your entire bodyweight. It's the most researched exercise for hamstring injury prevention, shown to reduce hamstring strains by up to 51% in athletic populations.

Nordic Curl Alternatives

Leg CurlWant machine hamstring curling — much easier to load and control
Glute Ham RaiseWant a bodyweight hamstring exercise that combines knee flexion with hip extension
Romanian DeadliftWant hamstring work through hip hinge — different loading pattern
Seated Leg CurlWant seated hamstring isolation with stretch emphasis

Nordic Curl Programming

Strength
3 × 3-5
sets × reps
Rest 2-3 min
Hypertrophy
3 × 5-8
sets × reps
Rest 2 min
Endurance
3 × 6-10
sets × reps
Rest 90 sec

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Nordic Curl FAQ

Can most people do Nordic curls?
Not at full range initially — and that's fine. Even the top 20-30% of the range provides benefit. Use your hands to catch yourself and push back up. Progress the range over weeks. Most people need 4-8 weeks to build up to a full eccentric.
How often should I do Nordics?
2-3 times per week. Even 2 sets of 5 slow eccentrics per session significantly reduces hamstring injury risk. More isn't always better — the intense eccentric takes time to recover from.
Do Nordic curls prevent hamstring injuries?
Yes — the most researched hamstring injury prevention exercise. Multiple large studies show 40-51% reduction in hamstring strains in athletes who include Nordics in their program.
What do I anchor my feet with?
A partner holding your ankles, a loaded barbell on the ground over your ankles, a dedicated Nordic curl bench, or a door anchor strap. The anchor must be completely solid — any give and the exercise doesn't work.