Best Quads Exercises for Strength — Top 10 Ranked
Building quads strength requires the right exercise selection. Not all quads exercises are created equal — some are dramatically better for strength than others. We ranked these based on muscle activation, progressive overload potential, and how well they match the 3-6 reps rep range that strength training demands.
Exercises are ranked by: (1) Quads muscle activation percentage, (2) compatibility with 3-6 reps rep ranges, (3) progressive overload potential, and (4) injury safety at the required intensity.
The front squat places the bar on the front of your shoulders, forcing a more upright torso that shifts the emphasis to the quads. It requires significant ankle mobility and upper back strength.
Key Form Cue
Rest the bar on the front of your shoulders with elbows high (clean grip or cross grip).
The barbell back squat is the king of all exercises. It trains the entire lower body and core while producing the highest hormonal response of any lift. If you only do one leg exercise, make it squats.
Key Form Cue
Position the bar on your upper traps (high bar) or rear delts (low bar).
The Zercher squat holds the barbell in the crooks of your elbows, forcing an extremely upright torso and crushing quad activation. It builds tremendous core strength and is one of the most quad-dominant barbell squat variations.
Key Form Cue
Cradle the bar in your elbow creases with hands clasped together in front of your chest.
The leg extension is the purest quad isolation exercise. It targets all four quad heads with peak tension at full knee extension, making it ideal for finishing off your quads after heavy compounds.
Key Form Cue
Adjust the machine so the pivot point aligns with your knee joint.
Walking lunges build functional single-leg strength, balance, and coordination. Each step challenges your quads, glutes, and stabilizer muscles in a way that bilateral exercises cannot.
Key Form Cue
Take a long step forward and lower your back knee toward the ground.
Box squats teach proper squat depth, break up the stretch-shortening cycle, and develop explosive power from a dead stop. Sit briefly on a box at parallel, then drive up.
Key Form Cue
Set up a box at a height that puts your thighs parallel to the ground.
The reverse lunge is easier on the knees than forward lunges because you decelerate into the back leg. It builds single-leg strength and is excellent for lifters with knee issues.
Key Form Cue
Stand tall with dumbbells at your sides or a barbell on your back.
The sissy squat isolates the quads by eliminating hip flexion. You lean back while bending at the knees, keeping your body in a straight line from knees to shoulders. Despite the name, it is an extremely difficult exercise.
Key Form Cue
Stand holding something for balance.
The barbell overhead squat is an advanced full-body movement that demands quad strength, shoulder mobility, and total-body stability. Snatch-grip the bar overhead with locked arms and squat to full depth while keeping the bar directly over your midfoot.
Key Form Cue
Use a wide snatch grip and press or snatch the bar to a locked-out overhead position.
The thruster combines a front squat with an overhead press in one fluid movement. It is one of the highest calorie-burning exercises and is a staple in metabolic conditioning workouts.
Key Form Cue
Hold a barbell in the front rack position or dumbbells at shoulder height.
Put these exercises into a real program
Revy's AI combines the best exercises for your goals into a personalized training program with progressive overload built in.