Single Leg Glute Bridge With Foam Roller

A foam-roller instability bridge progression that challenges hamstrings, glutes, and trunk control in a big way.

Muscles Targeted

Hamstrings, glute max, deep core stabilizers, hip stabilizers.

Key Benefits

  • Adds instability to demand better pelvic control
  • Great posterior chain challenge with minimal equipment
  • Builds endurance and control for running and sprint mechanics
  • Multiple progressions (reps, isometric, small roller movement)
If hamstrings cramp, shorten the range and build tolerance over time.

Equipment Needed

A foam roller and a mat/floor space.

How to Perform Single Leg Glute Bridge With Foam Roller

  1. Place your working heel on the foam roller and keep the other leg off the floor.
  2. Brace through the trunk and drive through the heel to lift hips.
  3. Keep hips level—avoid twisting or dropping.
  4. Lower slowly and repeat, or hold the top position for time.
  5. Advanced option: small, controlled roller movement while staying high.

Programming Options

  • 2–4 sets of 6–10 reps per side
  • Or 2–3 sets of 15–30 second holds per side
  • Use as a finisher or advanced bridge progression

Why This Variation Works

The unstable roller forces the posterior chain and trunk to stabilize continuously—small errors show up fast, which makes it great for building control.

When to Use It

Later-stage strength phases once standard single-leg bridging is solid and you want a higher control demand.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it normal for my hamstrings to cramp?

It can happen early. Reduce range, shorten the set, and build up gradually as tolerance improves.

How do I keep the roller from sliding everywhere?

Use a slower tempo and keep steady heel pressure into the roller—avoid jerky reps.

Should my hips be as high as possible?

Aim for a clean straight line without arching the low back. Height only counts if you stay level and controlled.