The answer to 'why do lunges hurt my knees' isn't that your knees are just 'bad'; it's almost always because your front knee travels more than 2-3 inches past your ankle, putting immense shearing force on your patellar tendon. You see lunges in every workout plan, you know they're a foundational leg exercise, but every time you step forward, you feel that sharp, grinding pain right below your kneecap. It's frustrating. You might even think you're just not built for them. That’s incorrect. You’re not broken, your form is. When your knee drifts too far forward, it shifts the load from the big, powerful muscles in your glutes and hamstrings onto a small, vulnerable tendon. Imagine trying to stop a 150-pound rolling cart with your finger instead of your whole body. That’s what you’re asking your knee tendon to do. The goal of a lunge isn't to see how far forward you can step; it's to lower your body straight down, loading your glutes and quads. The pain is a signal that your body is using a flawed, inefficient pattern. We can fix that pattern, and it doesn't require months of rehab-it requires about 10 minutes of focused practice on a few key details.
That forward knee travel doesn't happen in a vacuum. It's a symptom of a deeper issue: a massive imbalance between the front and back of your legs. For 9 out of 10 people I see with this issue, their quadriceps (front of the thigh) are overactive and their glutes and hamstrings (back of the leg) are weak and underactive. Your body is lazy by nature; it will always choose the path of least resistance. When you lunge, your overdeveloped quads fire up immediately and pull your knee forward because your brain knows they're the strongest muscle available for the job. Your glutes, which should be acting as the primary 'brakes' and stabilizers, are basically asleep. This forces all the deceleration stress of the lunge directly onto the patellar tendon, causing inflammation and pain. It's a classic case of the wrong muscles doing the job. Another hidden culprit is poor ankle mobility. If your ankle can't bend enough (a skill called dorsiflexion), your body compensates by lifting your heel and driving your knee forward to complete the movement. You can test this right now: try to do a bodyweight squat with your feet flat on the floor. If your heels lift up before your thighs are parallel to the ground, you have an ankle mobility issue that is directly contributing to your knee pain during lunges. Fixing the lunge isn't just about thinking 'keep my knee back'; it's about re-activating your glutes and improving mobility so your body naturally chooses the correct, pain-free movement pattern.
Forget forward lunges for the next 30 days. We're going to rebuild your movement pattern from the ground up so that when you return to them, the movement is automatic and painless. This isn't about 'toughing it out'; it's about being smart.
The forward lunge is an advanced movement because it requires deceleration and balance. A split squat removes both, allowing you to focus purely on form. Get into a lunge stance, with your feet about 2-3 feet apart. Your back heel should be off the ground. Now, lower your body straight down until your back knee gently taps the floor or a pad. Your front shin should be perfectly vertical to the floor. This is the 90/90 position: a 90-degree angle at your front knee and a 90-degree angle at your back knee. If your front knee is way over your toes, your stance is too short. If you feel a huge stretch in your back hip flexor, your stance is too long. Find the sweet spot. Hold onto a wall or squat rack for balance. Perform 3 sets of 10 reps on each leg, twice a week. No weight. The goal is perfect, pain-free form.
After a week of mastering the split squat, introduce reverse lunges. Stepping backward is far less stressful on the knee because it emphasizes pushing off the front leg (a glute-dominant movement) rather than braking with the front leg (a quad-dominant movement). Stand tall, then take a big step backward with one leg, lowering your back knee toward the floor. Focus on keeping your front shin vertical, just like in the split squat. Push through your front heel to return to the starting position. You should feel this primarily in the glute of your front leg. Perform 3 sets of 8-12 reps per leg. If this is pain-free, you can hold a 10 or 15-pound dumbbell in each hand.
While you're re-patterning your lunge, you need to directly strengthen the muscles that protect your knees. This is non-negotiable. Add these two exercises to your routine twice a week.
After 3-4 weeks of consistently performing steps 1-3, it's time to re-test. Do not use any weight. Perform one set of 5 forward lunges on each leg. Film yourself from the side. Is your front shin staying mostly vertical? Is the pain gone? If you have zero pain and your form looks good, you have successfully re-patterned the movement. You can now slowly incorporate a low volume of bodyweight forward lunges (e.g., 2-3 sets of 8 reps) into your routine. If you still feel pain, spend another 2 weeks focusing on reverse lunges and glute strengthening before re-testing.
This process requires patience. Your brain has spent years defaulting to a bad movement pattern, and it will take a few weeks to overwrite it. Here is the realistic timeline.
Your shoes matter. Performing lunges in cushioned, unstable running shoes can worsen knee pain. The soft foam allows your foot to wobble, which translates to instability up at the knee. Opt for a flat, stable shoe with minimal cushioning, or even go barefoot to improve foot stability and control.
Start with static lunges (split squats) first. Walking lunges are an advanced progression that requires significant balance and control to perform correctly. Master the static version for 3-4 weeks before even attempting the walking version to ensure your form is locked in and your knees are protected.
Learn the difference between muscle burn and joint pain. Muscle fatigue is a warm, burning sensation within the muscle belly-this is safe and productive. Joint pain is a sharp, stabbing, or grinding feeling in or around the joint itself. If you feel any sharp pain, stop the set immediately. Pushing through joint pain guarantees injury.
If even the regressions cause pain, focus on exercises that build the same muscles without stressing the knee joint. Goblet squats, box squats (squatting down to a box or bench), and step-ups onto a low (12-inch) box are excellent alternatives to build foundational leg strength safely.
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