
The band decline sit-up is a hip-flexion strength exercise that primarily targets the iliopsoas (deep hip flexors), with help from the quadriceps, serratus anterior, and tensor fasciae latae. Performed on a decline bench against a resistance band, the downhill angle and band tension load the hip flexors and trunk through a long, controlled range.
Band Decline Sit-up: So führst du sie aus
- 1Anchor a resistance band to a low, sturdy point behind the high end of a decline bench.
- 2Set the bench to a moderate decline and hook your feet securely under the foot pads at the top.
- 3Lie back along the bench and hold the free end of the band at your chest or behind your head, taking up the slack so it is already under tension.
- 4Brace your core and tuck your chin slightly toward your chest to start the movement from your trunk, not your neck.
- 5Curl up smoothly against the band, leading with your shoulders and flexing at the hips until your torso is upright.
- 6Squeeze your hip flexors and abs briefly at the top while keeping the band tension controlled.
- 7Lower yourself back down slowly, resisting the band on the way until your shoulders nearly touch the bench.
- 8Complete your reps, then release the band tension under control and unhook your feet.
Technik-Tipps
- Keep the band under tension through the whole rep, including the lowering phase, so the hip flexors and abs stay loaded the entire time.
- Move at a steady tempo and drive the motion from your hips and trunk rather than yanking with your arms or neck.
- Set the decline only as steep as you can control with the band added — a moderate angle keeps tension on the muscles instead of momentum.
- Double-check the band anchor and your foot hooks before each set so nothing slips while you are loaded.
- Exhale as you curl up and inhale as you lower to help maintain a tight brace.
Häufige Fehler
- Pulling on the band with your arms or jerking your head forward, which shifts work off the hip flexors and strains the neck.
- Letting the band snap you back down instead of resisting it, which wastes the eccentric and risks straining the trunk.
- Using too steep a decline or too heavy a band, forcing you to swing up with momentum and lose tension.
- Hooking your feet loosely, so they can slip mid-rep and drop you under load.
- Rounding hard and crunching only the upper back instead of flexing through the hips, cutting the range short.
Häufig gestellte Fragen
What muscles does the band decline sit-up work?
It primarily works the iliopsoas (deep hip flexors), with the quadriceps, serratus anterior, and tensor fasciae latae assisting as synergists.
Why add a band to the decline sit-up?
The band adds resistance that increases as you curl up, so the hip flexors and abs stay loaded through the whole range — including the lowering phase — instead of only fighting gravity.
Is the band decline sit-up good for beginners?
It can be, but start with a light band and a shallow decline. Master a bodyweight decline sit-up first, then add band tension once you can control the full range.
How many sets and reps should I do?
For hypertrophy and strength endurance, 3–4 sets of 10–15 controlled reps works well. Pick a band tension and decline angle you can complete without swinging or jerking.
Where should I feel this exercise?
You should feel it mainly in the front of your hips (the hip flexors) and your abs, with some work in the quadriceps. Sharp neck or lower-back pain means you are using momentum — reduce the angle or band tension.







