The core difference in the Romanian deadlift vs stiff leg deadlift debate is a 1-inch bar path deviation and a fixed 15-degree knee bend. This small change completely shifts the target from your hamstrings and glutes to your lower back and spinal erectors. You've likely seen both lifts in programs, noticed they look almost identical, and are worried you're doing the wrong one for your goals. Worse, you might be doing a sloppy hybrid of the two and feeling it all in your lower back, which is the fastest way to get frustrated and quit.
Let's clear this up for good. 90% of people reading this should be doing the Romanian Deadlift (RDL). It is the superior movement for building muscle in your hamstrings and glutes.
Romanian Deadlift (RDL): The Hamstring Builder
This is a pure hip hinge. You initiate the movement by pushing your hips straight back. Your shins stay almost perfectly vertical, and your knees maintain a soft, fixed bend of about 15-20 degrees throughout the entire lift. The barbell slides down your thighs, staying as close to your body as possible. The goal is to load the hamstrings and glutes through a deep stretch. Think of it as a horizontal movement: hips back, then hips forward.
Stiff Leg Deadlift (SLDL): The Back Strengthener
This is a spinal flexion and extension movement. While your legs are kept 'stiff', they are not locked out. You initiate by bending at the waist, allowing your lower back to round as you lower the bar. The bar drifts a few inches out in front of your legs, creating a massive lever arm that your lower back (spinal erectors) must control. This is not a primary muscle-building exercise; it's a specific accessory movement for strengthening the lower back and providing a loaded stretch for the entire posterior chain. It's a tool for advanced lifters, not a foundation for beginners.
If your goal is a stronger, more muscular lower body, the RDL is your answer. If you're an advanced powerlifter looking to strengthen your spinal erectors to support a heavier conventional deadlift, the SLDL has a place, but with much lighter weight.
The reason an RDL targets your hamstrings and an SLDL targets your lower back comes down to one simple physics concept: the moment arm. The moment arm is the distance from the joint doing the work to the weight being lifted. A longer moment arm means the muscle has to work exponentially harder.
In a Romanian Deadlift, you keep the barbell glued to your legs. This creates a very short moment arm for your spine, meaning your lower back only has to work to stay stable. However, because you're pushing your hips far back, you create a long moment arm for your hip joint. This forces your hamstrings and glutes-the primary hip extensors-to do the vast majority of the work to pull the weight back up. This is exactly what you want for building muscle in those areas.
In a Stiff Leg Deadlift, the opposite happens. As you bend over, you intentionally let the bar drift a few inches forward. This small change dramatically increases the length of the moment arm for your spine. Your lower back muscles now have to fight immense leverage to control the weight. Think about holding a 45-pound plate. Holding it against your chest is easy. Holding it with your arms extended straight out is brutally difficult. That's the difference in force your spine experiences between an RDL and an SLDL.
This is why the #1 mistake people make is using their RDL weight for an SLDL. They treat it like a primary lift when it's an accessory. An SLDL should be performed with 40-50% less weight than your RDL. Trying to go heavy on an SLDL puts your spinal discs under tremendous shearing force and is a recipe for injury, not growth.
Executing these lifts correctly is non-negotiable. One builds muscle safely; the other can sideline you if you're careless. Follow this checklist precisely. Don't mix and match steps. They are two distinct movements with two distinct purposes.
The starting position dictates the entire lift. Get this wrong, and you'll be fighting your body the whole time.
This is where the magic happens for the RDL and where the risk appears for the SLDL.
How you return to the start is just as important as how you went down.
Don't just do an exercise; use it with purpose.
Starting a new, effective movement comes with an adaptation period. Here’s the honest timeline so you know what to expect and don't think you're doing something wrong.
Week 1-2: The Soreness Phase
If you perform RDLs correctly for the first time, you will experience a level of hamstring soreness you didn't know was possible. It's a deep, specific ache that confirms you've finally targeted the muscle correctly. Don't be a hero. Start with just the 45lb barbell or very light dumbbells to master the hip hinge. For SLDLs, your lower back will feel fatigued and pumped, but you should not feel any sharp, localized pain. If you do, your form is wrong or the weight is too heavy.
Month 1: The Connection Phase
By week 3 or 4, the debilitating soreness will subside into a satisfying muscle ache. You will have developed a strong mind-muscle connection. You'll be able to feel your hamstrings and glutes working during every rep of an RDL. You should be able to increase your working weight by 10-20% from where you started. You'll also notice your glutes feel more engaged during other lifts like squats.
When to Choose the RDL: Choose the RDL if your goal is building bigger hamstrings, stronger glutes, improving your squat and deadlift, or increasing your athletic power. It is a foundational movement for almost every training goal.
When to Choose the SLDL: Choose the SLDL only if you are an intermediate or advanced lifter with no history of back pain, and you have a specific need to strengthen your spinal erectors for a heavier conventional deadlift. It is a specialist's tool, not a general-purpose builder. For most, the risk outweighs the reward.
Yes, but in a specific order. Perform your heavier, muscle-building RDLs first for 3-4 sets in the 8-12 rep range. Afterwards, you can use the SLDL with a much lighter weight (around 50% of your RDL weight) for 2 sets of 12-15 reps as a loaded stretch and finisher.
For RDLs, use a challenging weight that allows perfect form for 8-12 reps. You should feel like you only have 1-2 reps left in the tank at the end of your set. For SLDLs, the weight is secondary to the stretch. Start with 40-50% of your RDL weight and focus entirely on control.
The RDL is vastly superior for glute growth. The deep hip hinge under load places maximum tension on the glutes as they work to extend the hips. The SLDL shifts tension to the lower back, significantly reducing the glutes' involvement and making it a poor choice for building your backside.
Both are excellent tools. Dumbbells allow for a more neutral grip and can help identify and correct strength imbalances between your left and right sides. A barbell is better for progressive overload, as you can load more total weight over time, which is key for long-term muscle growth.
This is the most common mistake and it means you are not hinging correctly. You are bending at your waist instead of pushing your hips back. The fix: cut the weight by 50%. Stand facing away from a wall, about a foot in front of it. Initiate the RDL by trying to touch the wall with your butt. This forces the hip hinge pattern.
All content and media on Mofilo is created and published for informational purposes only. It is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition, including but not limited to eating disorders, nutritional deficiencies, injuries, or any other health concerns. If you think you may have a medical emergency or are experiencing symptoms of any health condition, call your doctor or emergency services immediately.