Exercises Back Reverse Hyperextension

Reverse Hyperextension: Correct Form & Muscles Worked

Glutes, Lower Back primary Reverse Hyper Machine or Flat Bench Intermediate Isolation · Pull

The reverse hyperextension flips the back extension — your torso stays fixed on a bench while your legs swing behind you against resistance. It builds the glutes, hamstrings, and lower back while decompressing the spine, making it uniquely therapeutic.

Front Back
Glutes, Lower Backprimary
Hamstringssecondary

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Reverse Hyperextension Video Tutorial

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How to Do the Reverse Hyperextension

  1. Lie face-down on a reverse hyper machine or a tall flat bench with your hips at the edge. Your upper body is on the bench, legs hanging off the end.
  2. Grip the handles or the sides of the bench for stability. Your legs hang straight down.
  3. Swing your legs up and back by contracting your glutes and lower back. Raise your legs until they're in line with your torso or slightly above.
  4. Squeeze your glutes at the top. Hold briefly.
  5. Let your legs swing back down under control. The pendulum-like motion provides a gentle spinal traction at the bottom — this is the decompression benefit.

Reverse Hyperextension Mistakes to Avoid

Swinging too aggressively — the momentum should come from the glutes, not from jerking your body. Controlled swings, not violent ones.
Hyperextending at the top — don't kick your legs way above your body. In line with your torso or just slightly above is the target.
Not having a tall enough surface — if you use a bench, it needs to be high enough that your legs can swing freely without hitting the floor.
Skipping this exercise — many lifters don't know about it. The spinal decompression benefit alone makes it worth including, especially if you squat and deadlift heavy.

Reverse Hyperextension Muscles Worked

The reverse hyperextension targets the glutes and erector spinae as primary movers, with hamstring assistance. The unique benefit is spinal decompression during the swinging phase — the spine is gently tractioned under load, which is therapeutic for lifters with compressed discs.

Reverse Hyperextension Alternatives

HyperextensionWant the standard version — torso moves, legs stay fixed
Glute BridgeWant a simpler glute exercise on the floor
Cable Pull-ThroughWant a standing hip hinge for glutes and hamstrings
Good MorningWant a barbell posterior chain exercise

Reverse Hyperextension Programming

Strength
3 × 10-15
sets × reps
Rest 90 sec
Hypertrophy
3 × 15-20
sets × reps
Rest 60 sec
Endurance
3 × 20-30
sets × reps
Rest 45 sec

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Reverse Hyperextension FAQ

What does the reverse hyperextension do?
It strengthens the glutes, hamstrings, and lower back while simultaneously decompressing the spine. It's one of the few exercises that builds and heals the lower back at the same time.
Can I do reverse hypers without a machine?
Yes — lie face-down on a tall bench, GHD, or even a sturdy table with your hips at the edge. Your legs hang off and swing. No weight needed at first — bodyweight is enough.
How often should I do reverse hyperextensions?
2-3 times per week is ideal, especially if you squat and deadlift heavy. Many powerlifters do them every training day as spinal maintenance.
Reverse hyper vs regular hyperextension?
Regular hypers have the torso moving (more spinal flexion/extension). Reverse hypers have the legs moving (more hip extension, less spinal load). Reverse hypers are gentler on the spine and provide decompression. Both are valuable.