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Standing Toe Touches

Hamstrings Calves Beginner Stretching
Standing Toe Touches Standing Toe Touches
Level
Beginner
Force
Static
Instructions
  1. Stand with some space in front and behind you.
  2. Bend at the waist, keeping your legs straight, until you can relax and let your upper body hang down in front of you. Let your arms and hands hang down naturally. Hold for 10 to 20 seconds.
Frequently asked questions
What muscles does the Standing Toe Touches work?

Standing Toe Touches primarily targets the Hamstrings. It also engages the Calves as secondary muscles. This makes it an effective stretching exercise for building hamstrings development.

Is the Standing Toe Touches suitable for beginners?

Yes. The Standing Toe Touches is a beginner-friendly exercise. Focus on proper form before adding weight or intensity. It's a great movement to include early in your training.

How many sets and reps should I do for the Standing Toe Touches?

Hold the Standing Toe Touches for 20-30 seconds per side, repeating 2-3 times. Stretch after your workout or on rest days when your muscles are warm. Never bounce or force a stretch past your comfortable range of motion.

What are good alternatives to the Standing Toe Touches?

Good alternatives include the 90/90 Hamstring, Alternating Hang Clean, Ball Leg Curl. These exercises target similar muscle groups (Hamstrings) and can be substituted based on available equipment or training preference.

How to use Standing Toe Touches — How to, Muscles, Form

Best for: Building practical strength and adding focused work for Hamstrings, Calves. Use it when the movement fits your goal, equipment, and recovery.

Programming tip: Start with a load you can control for every rep. Add reps before adding weight, and keep the last rep clean enough that you could repeat the movement next week.

Common mistake: Chasing heavier weight before the setup, range of motion, and tempo are consistent. If the rep changes every set, the log stops telling the truth.

Track it: Log weight, reps, sets, and one short note about form or difficulty. Over time, those notes explain plateaus better than motivation quotes ever will.

Track this exercise

Log sets, reps, and weight. See your progress over time.

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