You dont need barbells to sculpt strong leg muscles try these 5 dumbbell exercises for beginn

Publish date: 2024-06-12

The best dumbbell leg exercises for beginners build lower body muscle and stronger quads, hips, glutes, hamstrings and calves without barbells. Barbells have long been the gold standard for packing heavy weights for leg exercises, but the best adjustable dumbbells or fixed bells are a great alternative to using one and are more accessible for beginners or those enjoying home workouts.  

Your glutes and quads are some of the biggest and most powerful in the human body; we recommend scaling up with medium to heavy weights if you plan to try the dumbbell exercises below to ensure you’re properly loading your legs and challenging core stability.

If you’re currently working with an injury, pre or post-natal, or are new to exercise, we always recommend checking in with a qualified physician before starting a new regime. 

5 dumbbell leg exercises for beginners 

Dumbbell split squats

Unlike Bulgarian split squats, which elevate your back leg, this version only uses the ground and is a great entry-level split squat exercise to try. Split squats work both legs together but tap into unilateral training by working the right and left sides of your body slightly differently.

How:

You can slightly lean forward during this exercise to help engage your glutes, but avoid an excessive lean or hunching into your back.

Dumbbell front rack squats

Supporting a dumbbell on each shoulder challenges core strength and stability and requires both sides of the body to work in unison. You’ll also work on shoulder mobility as you slightly elevate your elbows to shelve the dumbbells as you squat. Start by racking light, but as you get stronger, the resting position on your shoulders should allow you to hit the heavy dumbbells.

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How:

Dumbbell frog squats "froggies"

The frog squat torches the quads and hamstrings using a forward and backward rocking motion — but it’s not quite a squat. You’ll sit low into the squat position, then practice lifting and lowering your bum while keeping your knees bent. It builds fire in the lower body and tests leg strength.

How:

Dumbbell squat hold

The squat hold is tough on the legs, but adding load to the squat hold sends this dumbbell exercise into beast mode. Isometric contraction means holding muscles under active tension without the muscles lengthening or shortening. Unlike squats or lunges, you’ll hold a position for a set amount of time, which can be low impact for most people while building serious fire in the targeted muscles and strengthening them. 

How:

You could increase upper body engagement by holding the dumbbell away from your chest with arms extended or using the front rack position above to heavily load the lower body.

Prone dumbbell hamstring curls

The hamstrings are active during squats and lunges, but isolating them can help you hone the muscle groups with more intensity. For this exercise, just use one dumbbell and practice slowing the exercise down and moving with control through the lifting and lowering phases to work the hamstrings harder for longer. 

How:

Avoid swinging the weights and the front body pressed down. If you use a bench, you may need a spotter to position the dumbbell for you. It's surprisingly brutal, so start light and build up.

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