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The PERFECT Leg Workout (Sets and Reps Included)



The perfect leg workout must consist of compound exercises for the quads, glutes and hamstrings while not overlooking the smaller muscles of the hips and our ability to train in all three planes. In this leg workout, you will find that we overlook no component of upper leg training and get you training like an athlete in the process.

As with all videos in this perfect workout series, the goal here is to make sure you will build not only size by following these leg exercises but strength and explosiveness as well. This starts as always with a compound movement for the legs, and there is none better than the squat. While warming up to perform the squat the key is not to exhaust yourself more than necessary. Too many times, people perform too many warmups, cutting into energy reserves for their working sets.

What you should do instead, is do a few reps with your sub-working weight to loosen up your joints. Just before starting your first work set, perform one touch-up set with about 10 percent more than what you will be using for your workout. Perform just 1 to 2 reps here to prepare the nervous system and neurologically “lighten” the load that is to come.

Work your way from sets of 5 to a set of 25 grueling reps on the squats before moving onto the next component of this leg workout; the posterior chain compound exercise.

Here you have two choices. You can either do the barbell hip thrust or the glute ham raise. Keep in mind, because you will be able to significantly load the barbell hip thrust more than you will the glute ham raise, you will want to opt for this exercise if your main goal is training for strength. That said, if you are looking to get more active engagement of the hamstrings through their concentric range of motion, then you will want to do the GHR since it contributes in areas that the hip thrust only isometrically challenges.

The next exercise is the hi/low dumbbell bulgarian split squat. This is a necessary component of any athletic lower body training approach because it is a unilateral exercise. Not only do the dynamic stability benefits shine through here but it challenges the body in the frontal plane in ways that traditional bilateral training via squats cannot do. Alternate the position of your torso on each rep to ensure you hit both the quads and the glutes more effectively on each rep.

The TKE Drop Lunge is a great way to ensure resistance through terminal knee extension. Now, it is important that you understand that there is no way to isolate the medial or inner portion of the quads during an exercise. What you can do however is ensure that this separately innervated head of the quads gets full stimulation by going to a full lockout position of extension on every rep. We can overload that with the addition of the band as well.

Next, no perfect leg workout would be complete without the additional focus on the inside and outside of our legs. The adductors are hit tremendously well with the Goblet Adductor Lunge shown in this video. Don’t just step back up to the top, but slide or squeeze your legs together to get yourself back to a standing position. This will light up the all important adductor muscles on the inside of your thighs and help you to build the strength needed.

Finally, you have to hit the outside abductors of your legs as well. This can be accomplished with the finisher shown. The hip band ladder requires that you work your way up to 10 reps in each direction of a side step while making sure to keep your toes pointed straight ahead at all times. This will strengthen the outside of your legs, which is an area that tends to be very weak.

For the complete sets and reps of every exercise of this workout, be sure to check the end of the video where I include all of the information. For more complete workouts that are laid out step by step and put the science back into training along the way, be sure to head to the link below and get the athlean-x Training Systems. Start training like an athlete and start looking like one fast.

For more videos on how to build bigger legs and the best leg workouts without equipment, be sure to subscribe to this channel via the link below and turn on notifications so you never miss a new video when it’s published.

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49 Comments

  1. NOTIFICATION SQUAD GIVEAWAY – Alright guys, I’m giving away a complete 30 Day Workout program to 100 lucky clickers within the first hour this video is published! Remember, this is NOT THE FIRST 100, but those randomly selected within the first hour the video is published. Click the link to see if you’ve won. No strings attached! 
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  2. You’re awesome! Really digging the detailed breakdowns and emphasis on ALL muscle groups. Your my go to trainer on the gym and have kept me motivated buddy. Best shape of my life 💪🏻

  3. Jeff, huge fan! Now I’ve got back issues and can’t load my spine so I am forced to do leg extensions as squats effect my recently repaired annular tears on my lower discs followed by stem cell inflation.

  4. Your videos have been great way to learn about anatomy and every video has taught me something new, even if I wanted to only rehearse. Like adding that human adapts to moving slow if you only train slow movements, while being somewhat obvious if you think about it, was a great point to make and I will do my best to include that piece of knowledge in my workouts. I'm still only a beginner when it comes to athletics and yet to figure out what works for me, but I'm learning and these videos have been of immeasureable help. Free access to information presented this clearly is a gift from heavens for us poor bastards with easy access to internet. So, thank you for sharing.

  5. When would you recommend to do my body workout? Right after? But the leg workout takes so long
    Should I train really intense right after legs or maybe just a bit and do another body workout on my free day? Don't know when to do it

  6. Is there any particular reason he isn't including any machines? Of course all of these exercises are good, but leg extensions, leg curls and hip abductor machines are all solid too, and virtually every competitive bodybuilder uses all of these.

  7. Can someone help me. I dont understand the squat set rep layout.. so you start with two sets 5 reps, what weight, max weight? And then move up to 10 to 25 reps for the last two sets, is that the same weight as the two first sets or lowered weight?? This is the part that i dont understand

  8. I did this workout and my legs were so shot afterwards that I had to work hard to walk out of the gym to my car to drive home. The voice of Forrest Gump spoke in my head: “You ain’t got no legs, Lieutenant Dan!”

  9. Rest times between sets of everything after squats? Can't imagine it's 3 minutes between sets for the whole workout.
    Does the order of the exercises matter greatly? I usually do side lunges and the banded squats (Jeff used lunges) as a warm-up.
    Also, I deadlift on leg day. Where/how would that fit in this workout?

  10. Guys I need help I’m in my moms account and u have a question he says 4 x 5 does he mean 4 sets of each thing like four of 25 and four of 10 and 4 of 4-5 and 5?

  11. So I have a question regarding the Bulgarian split squat (slim hope for an answer, but anyways). In an earlier video titled "Single Greatest Leg Exercise (NO MISTAKE!)", Jeff is advising us to keep the thoracic spine "nice and tight, and upright" (checking this with a stick held touching the back), while here he clearly is bending his back. Which option is actually best? Does the one from this video, with a bent back, pose a big strain on the low back and a risk of injury there?

  12. I have to ask. I have never done bulgarian split squats and I've been researching the best way to do them. I noticed you put your head down a few times while doing them. I know you are supposed to look straight ahead during squats and deadlifts because it helps to stabilize your back and avoid injury. I'm getting older so I think about these things more than I did in my earlier years. Is it good practice to look straight ahead during these or does it not matter as much as it does in heavier lifts like squats and deadlifts?

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