Pistol Squat Mistakes to Avoid
Heel lifting — the most common limiter. Ankle mobility is usually the bottleneck. Elevate your heel on a small plate while you develop mobility.
Extended leg touching the ground — the free leg stays off the floor the entire time. If it touches, you don't have the hip flexor strength/flexibility yet.
Falling backward at the bottom — counterbalance by extending arms forward or holding a light plate in front of you. The weight actually helps with balance.
Attempting pistols before building the base — you need to comfortably do 20+ bodyweight squats and 12+ Bulgarian split squats per leg before attempting pistols.
Pistol Squat FAQ
How do I learn the pistol squat?
Progression: bodyweight squats → Bulgarian split squats → assisted pistol squats (holding a pole or TRX) → box pistol squats (sitting to a box and standing on one leg) → full pistol squats. This typically takes 2-6 months.
How many pistol squats is good?
One clean rep per leg is a significant achievement. 5 per leg is impressive. 10+ per leg is elite calisthenics territory.
My ankle mobility limits me — what do I do?
Elevate your heel on a small plate or wedge. This compensates for limited ankle dorsiflexion. Simultaneously work on ankle mobility (wall ankle stretches, banded mobilizations). Over time, reduce the heel elevation.
Are pistol squats bad for knees?
Not inherently — but the deep knee flexion under full bodyweight demands adequate strength and mobility. If your knees hurt, you're not ready. Build strength with Bulgarian split squats first. Pain-free depth is the only acceptable depth.