Glute Ham Sit-up exercise animation (Mujer)

Glute Ham Sit-up

Músculo objetivo
Equipamiento
Body weight
Parte del cuerpo
Waist
Tipo
Strength

The glute ham sit-up is a body-weight core exercise performed on a glute-ham developer (GHD), working the abs and surrounding waist muscles through a full sit-up range. Because your feet are anchored and your hips are unsupported, it loads the core over a longer range than a floor sit-up, making it a strong choice for building trunk strength and control.

Cómo hacer el Glute Ham Sit-up

  1. 1Set the GHD foot plate and hip pad so the pad sits at the top of your thighs and you can hook your feet securely under the rollers.
  2. 2Sit on the pad facing away from the foot rollers, anchor your feet, and lower your hips slightly so your glutes rest at the front edge of the pad.
  3. 3Cross your arms over your chest or place your fingertips at your temples, keeping your chin slightly tucked.
  4. 4Lean back under control, extending your torso down until it is roughly parallel to the floor and you feel a stretch through your abs.
  5. 5Brace your core and curl up, lifting your shoulders and then your back off the line of the pad until your torso is upright.
  6. 6Exhale as you rise and avoid yanking with your arms or neck; let your abs drive the movement.
  7. 7Pause briefly at the top with your torso tall, then lower back down with control to begin the next rep.
  8. 8Complete your reps, then unhook your feet and step off the GHD carefully.

Consejos de técnica

  • Move at a controlled tempo in both directions; the slow lowering phase is where much of the core work happens.
  • Keep your chin lightly tucked and your hands relaxed so you don't pull on your head or strain your neck.
  • Limit your backward range to where you can still curl up with your abs, rather than dropping into a deep stretch you can't control.
  • Exhale and brace as you sit up to keep tension on the core and protect your lower back.
  • Build up range and reps gradually; this movement is more demanding than a floor sit-up because the hips are unsupported.

Errores comunes

  • Pulling on your head or neck with your hands, which strains the neck and takes work away from the abs.
  • Throwing your torso up with momentum instead of curling under control, which reduces core tension and can stress the lower back.
  • Extending too far backward into a range you can't control, making it hard to reverse the rep and overloading the spine.
  • Holding your breath through the rep, which raises pressure and makes bracing harder; exhale as you rise instead.
  • Setting the foot anchor loosely so your feet slip mid-set, costing stability and cutting the set short.

Preguntas frecuentes

What muscles does the glute ham sit-up work?

It mainly works the abs and the surrounding core muscles of the waist. Anchoring your feet on the GHD lets you train the trunk through a long sit-up range from a backward stretch to a fully upright torso.

Is the glute ham sit-up good for beginners?

It is more challenging than a floor sit-up because your hips are unsupported, so start with a shorter range of motion and build up. Beginners can master a regular crunch or floor sit-up first, then progress to the GHD.

What's a good alternative to the glute ham sit-up?

If you don't have a GHD, a decline-bench sit-up or a standard floor sit-up trains the same core pattern. Anchoring your feet and controlling the tempo gives you a similar trunk-flexion stimulus.

How many sets and reps should I do?

Start with 2–3 sets of 8–12 controlled reps. Add reps or sets as your core gets stronger, and stop a rep or two before your form breaks down.

Should I go all the way back on every rep?

Only as far as you can control. Lower until your torso is about parallel to the floor and you feel a stretch through the abs, but avoid dropping into a deep range you can't reverse without momentum.

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