Banded Single-Leg Glute Bridge
One leg, one band, twice the glute medius work, the cleanest way to balance left and right hips before heavy sled or lunge sessions.

What is the banded single-leg glute bridge?
The banded single-leg glute bridge is a unilateral hip extension performed with a mini-band just above the knees. You bridge up on one foot while the free leg stays lifted, and you push out against the band to keep the working knee tracking. It isolates one glute at a time, exposes side-to-side imbalances, and bulletproofs the hip stabilizers that take a beating during sled push, lunges, and running.
How to do the banded single-leg glute bridge
Common mistakes
- Pelvis dropping. If the unworked hip sags, the glute medius is failing. Slow down and prioritize a level pelvis over height.
- Hyperextending the back. Don't chase height with your spine. Lock out with glutes, ribs down.
- Knee caving inward. Active push against the band the whole rep, especially on the way down.
- Rushing reps. Quality over speed. Two seconds up, one-second hold, two seconds down.
Variations & progressions
No band, foot lower
Drop the band and keep the lifted foot resting on the floor with toes only. Learn pelvis control first.
Shoulders elevated, band + dumbbell
Put your shoulders on a bench and hold a dumbbell on the working hip. Massive range, massive load.
Side-lying hip abduction
Lie on your side with a band above the knees and lift the top leg. Same glute medius target, different angle.
How to program it
Three protocols by goal. Pick one per cycle and aim for progression on load or distance.
| Goal | Sets × Distance | Load | Rest |
|---|---|---|---|
| Activation | 2 × 10 / side | Light mini-band | 30 s |
| Imbalance correction | 3 × 12 / side | Medium mini-band | 45 s |
| Glute endurance | 3 × 20 / side | Medium mini-band | 60 s |
Add the banded single-leg glute bridge to your ZON program
Track load, distance and progression in one timeline.




