Exercises Legs Stiff-Leg Deadlift

Stiff-Leg Deadlift: Correct Form & Working Weight

Hamstrings primary Barbell Intermediate Compound · Pull

The stiff-leg deadlift uses completely straight legs to maximize the hamstring stretch during a hip hinge. Unlike the Romanian deadlift (slight knee bend), the locked knees put extreme demand on the hamstrings through a very long range of motion.

Front Back
Hamstringsprimary
Glutes, Lower Backsecondary

Find Your Working Weight

Enter a recent set to calculate targets

Crunching numbers...
Estimated 1RM
GoalWeightReps × Sets

Save your Stiff-Leg Deadlift numbers

Save to SetMaxx →

Stiff-Leg Deadlift Video Tutorial

Video tutorial coming soon

How to Do the Stiff-Leg Deadlift

  1. Stand holding a barbell at hip height with double overhand grip. Feet hip-width apart. Lock your knees completely straight — no bend.
  2. Push hips back and hinge forward, lowering the bar along your legs. Knees stay locked. Back stays flat.
  3. Lower as far as your hamstring flexibility allows — ideally the bar reaches mid-shin or the floor. You should feel an extreme hamstring stretch.
  4. Pause at the bottom of your range. Don't force depth beyond what your hamstrings allow with a flat back.
  5. Drive hips forward to return to standing. Squeeze glutes at the top.

Stiff-Leg Deadlift Mistakes to Avoid

Rounding the lower back — the most common error. If your back rounds before the bar reaches your target depth, that IS your range. Don't force it.
Bending the knees — any knee bend turns this into a Romanian deadlift. Keep knees locked for the full stiff-leg stimulus.
Going too heavy — the locked-knee position makes you mechanically weaker. Use significantly less weight than your RDL. This is a stretch exercise, not a strength exercise.
Bouncing at the bottom — the deep stretch is where hamstring injuries happen. Lower with control, pause, then rise.

Stiff-Leg Deadlift Muscles Worked

The stiff-leg deadlift maximally loads the hamstrings through the longest range of motion of any hip hinge. Locked knees prevent quad and glute assistance in the bottom range, forcing the hamstrings to handle the load through an extreme stretch. Lower back works isometrically.

Stiff-Leg Deadlift Alternatives

Romanian DeadliftWant the same hinge with a slight knee bend — allows heavier loads and is safer for most people
Single-Leg RDLWant unilateral hamstring hinge work
Good MorningWant a barbell-on-back hip hinge variation
Leg CurlWant machine hamstring isolation without the hinge pattern

Stiff-Leg Deadlift Programming

Strength
3 × 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

Not sure how to program the Stiff-Leg Deadlift into your routine?

SetMaxx builds your workout plan and tracks every set with one tap.

Get SetMaxx free →

Stiff-Leg Deadlift FAQ

Stiff-leg deadlift vs Romanian deadlift?
RDL has a slight knee bend and stops at mid-shin. Stiff-leg has locked knees and can go to the floor. Stiff-leg gives more hamstring stretch but is higher risk for the lower back. RDL is safer and more popular.
Should I stand on a deficit?
Only if you can reach the floor with a flat back already. Standing on a plate increases the range but also increases injury risk. Master the floor range first.
How much less weight than RDL?
Typically 15-25% less. The locked knees reduce mechanical advantage. If you RDL 80kg, stiff-leg with 60-68kg.
Is this safe for the lower back?
Yes IF your back stays flat. The moment it rounds, you've exceeded your safe range. Respect your hamstring flexibility as the limit, not how far down you want the bar to go.