Strength Training with Knee Problems: Exercises, Modifications & Alternatives
Strength Training with Bad Knees: What Works — and What Doesn't
Knee problems aren't a reason to stop training. But they're a reason to train differently.
Why Training Is GOOD for Your Knees
Most doctors say: "Rest the knee." Research says: Targeted strength training strengthens the muscles around the knee joint and reduces pain long-term (Fransen et al. 2015).
But — and this is crucial — the right exercises. Not all of them.
Exercises You Should Avoid
Problematic with knee issues:
- Deep barbell back squats (high shear forces on the knee joint)
- Leg press with extreme range of motion
- Jump squats or plyometrics
- Heavy loaded lunges
Not because these exercises are bad. Because they stress knee joints that are already compromised.
Safe Alternatives
Knee-friendly alternatives:
- Leg Press (controlled range of motion, 90° knee angle) → View exercise
- Goblet Squats (less load, better control) → View exercise
- Step-Ups (unilateral, easy to dose) → View exercise
- Leg Curls (don't stress the knee, strengthen hamstrings) → View exercise
- Leg Extensions (light weight, high reps, in pain-free range) → View exercise
→ View all exercises with 40+ safety ratings
Training Plan with Knee Problems
The principle is simple:
- Replace every exercise with high knee stress with a safe alternative
- Reduce intensity (higher reps, less weight)
- Warm up knees thoroughly (10-15 minutes)
- Stop at pain — don't "push through"
Or: Let the AI do it for you.
Related: Workout Plan Over 40 | Strength Training Over 40
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