June 29, 2026
Different Types of Squats: Which Variation Is Right for You?
Squats are the foundation of lower-body training, but the term covers a lot of ground. A goblet squat and a Bulgarian split squat are both technically squats — they don't feel remotely similar, and they're not training the same thing. The variation you choose changes which muscles get loaded, how much weight you can move, and whether the movement is even appropriate for where you are right now.
This guide covers 12 squat variations organized by category. Each one includes what it actually trains, who it suits, and how it differs from the alternatives. There's also a decision framework at the end if you're not sure where to start.
Bodyweight Squat Variations
Bodyweight squats are where most people start, and they're harder to do well than they look. Real depth, controlled descent, knees tracking properly — most beginners rush past all of it. Getting these right first also means the loaded variations feel more intuitive when you get there.
1. Sumo Squat
Widen your stance past shoulder-width and turn your toes out to around 45 degrees. That single setup change shifts the mechanics more than most people expect. Your hips open up differently, your inner thighs take on a bigger share of the work, and your torso tends to stay more upright without much deliberate effort — the stance naturally encourages it.
People with wider hips or tighter ankles often find this position more comfortable than shoulder-width. It's not a replacement for the standard squat either — the two hit different things, which is exactly why both show up in well-rounded leg programs.
Best for: Inner thigh and glute emphasis, wider hip structures, limited ankle mobility.
2. Sissy Squat
If you've never seen a sissy squat before, it looks wrong. Your knees travel way forward over your toes, your heels come off the ground, and you lean back as you drop toward the floor — basically everything standard squat coaching tells you to avoid. But that's the point. That position puts your quads under continuous tension through the entire range of motion, with your glutes and hamstrings barely involved at all. It's one of the only movements that isolates the quads that completely.
The trade-off is knee stress. The patellar tendon takes a real beating here, which makes this a poor choice for beginners or anyone with existing knee problems. For lifters with healthy knees who build into it gradually, though, it delivers a quad stimulus that machines and barbells don't quite replicate.
Best for: Advanced quad isolation, bodybuilders targeting the rectus femoris, lifters with healthy knees looking to add variety to leg day.
3. Cossack Squat
The Cossack squat is one of those movements that looks like a mobility drill until you load it — then it becomes something else entirely. You start with a wide stance, shift your weight to one side, and squat down on that leg while the other stays straight and extended out to the side. At the bottom, one hip is in a deep squat position while the other is being stretched in a direction most leg exercises never go. You alternate sides each rep.
That lateral loading pattern is what makes it worth including. Your adductors and hip external rotators get challenged in a way that forward-plane squats simply don't reach. Add a kettlebell or dumbbell at your chest and it stops being just a warm-up movement — it's a genuine strength exercise that also happens to open up your hips.
Best for: Hip mobility, adductor strength, unilateral leg work without the balance demands of a pistol squat.
4. Pistol Squat
A single-leg squat taken to full depth — you extend one leg straight out in front while squatting down on the other until your hip drops below your knee, then stand back up without assistance. No counterbalance, no support.
Getting there requires quad strength, ankle mobility, and balance all working together. Most people need months of progressive single-leg work — box-assisted pistols, TRX-supported reps, or Cossack squats — before a clean unassisted pistol becomes realistic. The payoff is real: it exposes and corrects strength imbalances between legs that bilateral squats often hide entirely.
Best for: Advanced bodyweight trainees, identifying and correcting left-right leg imbalances.
Free Weight Squat Variations
Adding load changes what's possible. Free weight squat variations let you accumulate the kind of progressive overload that drives serious muscle and strength development over time. But the way you hold the weight — and where — shifts the demand significantly between movements.
5. Back Squat
The back squat is what most serious strength programs are built around — and for good reason. Bar on your upper back, squat until your thighs hit parallel or below, stand back up. It sounds simple, and the basic pattern is, but actually owning the movement takes a lot longer than most people anticipate.
Where the bar sits changes the movement more than most people expect. High bar — resting on your upper traps — keeps your torso fairly upright and puts more demand on the quads. Move it down a few inches to your rear delts and you have to lean forward more to keep it balanced, which pulls your glutes, hamstrings, and spinal erectors into the equation much more. Low-bar lifters tend to move heavier weights; high-bar tends to suit people with good ankle mobility or an Olympic lifting background better. There's no universally correct answer — your build, your goals, and what your body actually tolerates are what determine which one makes sense.
What both positions share is a full lower body demand plus real core and upper back work just to stay upright under load. That's why the back squat is still the standard everything else gets measured against.
Best for: Overall lower body strength and size, progressive overload, powerlifting and general strength training.
6. Front Squat
The front squat takes the barbell off your back and moves it to the front of your shoulders, resting across your front delts with your elbows driven high. That one change forces your torso to stay considerably more upright — drop your chest and the bar rolls forward, which ends the set immediately. Your quads pick up a much larger share of the load as a result, and your lower back gets a significant break compared to back squatting.
Getting comfortable with the position takes time. The standard clean grip demands solid wrist and shoulder mobility that a lot of lifters don't have right away, which is why the cross-arm grip exists as a workaround. Either way, front squats are less forgiving than back squats — when your form goes, the bar tells you immediately. That's actually one of the things that makes it a useful training tool. You can't hide bad technique the way you sometimes can with a bar on your back.
Best for: Quad development, reducing lower back stress under load, Olympic weightlifting prep.
7. Goblet Squat
Hold a dumbbell or kettlebell at your chest with both hands — that's it. The front-loaded weight acts as a counterbalance that naturally pulls you into a more upright position, which makes hitting proper depth easier than almost any other squat variation. It's one of the best teaching tools for squat mechanics precisely because the weight helps you find the position rather than fighting against it.
Your quads do the primary work, and your upper back has to stay engaged to keep the weight from dragging you forward. Loaded heavier than most people attempt, the goblet squat is a legitimate strength movement — not just a warm-up drill.
Best for: Beginners learning the squat pattern, anyone working on depth, warm-up before heavier barbell work.
8. Bulgarian Split Squat
Most people underestimate this one until they actually try it. You set your rear foot up on a bench, step your front foot far enough forward that your knee tracks over your ankle at the bottom — and then your front leg handles nearly everything. The back leg isn't contributing much. That shift in accountability is what makes it so effective.
Any strength difference between your legs shows up immediately and honestly here. Your front quad, glute, and hamstring are working through a full range with no assistance from the other side. Bilateral squats let the stronger leg quietly pick up the slack without you noticing; this one makes that impossible. Your rear hip flexor is also being stretched under load throughout the entire set, so hip mobility improves as a natural byproduct rather than something you need to address separately.
Loading options are flexible — dumbbells at your sides tend to be the easiest to manage, but a barbell across your back or a kettlebell at your chest both work fine. The leg is doing the same job regardless of where the weight sits.
Best for: Correcting left-right strength imbalances, hip mobility, building quad and glute size with lower spinal loading than a back squat.
Machine Squat Variations
Machine-based squat variations reduce the stability demand and let you direct more attention to the muscles doing the work. That's not a shortcut — it's a specific tool. For beginners building a foundation, for experienced lifters isolating quads at the end of a session, or for anyone training around a lower back issue, machines offer options that free weights don't.
9. Smith Machine Squat
The Smith machine gets dismissed a lot, usually by people who haven't used one seriously. The bar runs on a fixed track, so balancing it isn't something you have to think about — and that changes what you can do with your foot position in ways a free barbell doesn't allow. Slide your feet further forward, and you shift more load onto your glutes and take pressure off your knees. Keep them closer under your hips, and it starts to feel closer to a traditional back squat, with the quads picking up more of the work.
The research does show that free-weight squats produce higher overall muscle activation — one frequently cited EMG study found the difference averaged around 43% across all muscles. That's worth knowing. But what the Smith machine gives up in stability demand, it makes up for in other ways. For a beginner, removing the balance variable means you can put your full attention on depth and control instead of splitting it between technique and keeping the bar from tipping. For an experienced lifter, it means pushing closer to failure without needing someone standing behind you. The safety hooks catch the bar if a set goes wrong.
A vertical or near-vertical track matters here. If you're building a home gym, the Major Fitness B52 and B17 are worth looking at — one machine covers Smith machine squats, pressing, and barbell work without needing separate equipment for each.
Best for: Beginners, solo training without a spotter, foot position experimentation, adjusting emphasis between quads and glutes.
10. Hack Squat
The hack squat machine keeps your back against a padded support while your feet press into a platform in front of you. Because your upper body is supported throughout, your legs handle almost everything — particularly your quads. Lower back involvement drops close to zero, which means you can push to real quad fatigue without your form or your spine becoming the limiting factor first.
Foot position on the platform still changes what gets trained. Lower placement increases quad activation; move your feet higher, and your glutes and hamstrings start contributing more. Either way, the fixed path lets you load heavier than most people can manage on free-weight front squats while keeping the same quad-dominant stimulus.
For home gym setups, the Major Fitness AH1 covers both hack squat and leg press in one machine — you switch between the two by repositioning the backrest pad, which takes under a minute. If you want dedicated quad and hamstring work without dedicating floor space to two separate pieces of equipment, it's a practical option.
Best for: Quad isolation, high-volume leg training, lifters managing lower back issues.
Plyometric Squat Variations
Plyometric squats introduce an explosive element that slow, controlled reps simply can't replicate. Your muscles have to produce maximum force in a very short window, which is what builds the kind of power that carries over to athletic performance. The joint demand is real though — these belong later in a session, after you've already put in strength work, not as a warm-up.
11. Jump Squat
Set up like a regular squat, drop down, and then put everything you have into driving yourself off the ground. The landing is where most people get sloppy — you want soft knees on the way down and immediate transition back into the next rep, no standing around at the bottom collecting yourself. The whole point is staying explosive through the full set.
Research on jump squats specifically points to strong carryover to athletic performance. A study on elite soccer players found that jump squat power output correlated closely with sprint speed, vertical jump height, and change of direction ability — more so than other common power exercises. That kind of direct transfer is what makes it worth including if you're training for sport, not just the gym.
Best for: Athletic power development, adding a conditioning element to leg day, intermediate to advanced lifters.
12. Box Squat
Put a box or bench behind you at around parallel height and squat back until you make contact with it — not sit down on it, just touch it and go. That brief pause is what separates this from a regular squat. You lose the elastic rebound that normally helps you out of the hole, so your muscles have to generate force from a near-dead stop every single rep. Most people find the same weight noticeably harder here than in a standard squat for exactly that reason.
It also has a way of fixing squat mechanics that cues alone don't always accomplish. Reaching back for the box naturally teaches you to sit your hips back rather than letting your knees drift forward — and once you've felt that pattern, it tends to stick. Powerlifters use box squats heavily loaded for maximal strength work; sprinters and athletes use them light and fast for power development. They also work well as a depth marker for beginners who aren't sure what parallel actually feels like under load.
Best for: Developing force production from a dead stop, correcting squat mechanics, speed work.
How to Choose the Right Squat Variation
Most people don't need twelve squat variations in their program. Two or three that complement each other will do more than cycling through every option on this list. The goal is to cover different demands — bilateral and unilateral, loaded and explosive, primary and accessory — without stacking movements that train the same pattern the same way.
Goal
Best Variations
Build Quad Size
Front squat, hack squat, Smith machine squat (feet under hips)
Build Glute & Posterior Chain Strength
Low-bar back squat, Bulgarian split squat, sumo squat
Fix Leg Imbalances
Bulgarian split squat, pistol squat
Train Without a Spotter
Smith machine squat, goblet squat, hack squat
Manage Lower Back Issues
Front squat, goblet squat, hack squat, Bulgarian split squat (dumbbells)
Develop Athletic Power
Jump squat, box squat
Learn to Squat From Scratch
Goblet squat, Smith machine squat, bodyweight squat
Limited Equipment
Bodyweight squat, sumo squat, Cossack squat, jump squat
A practical starting point for most lifters: one primary barbell squat — back or front, depending on your goals — one unilateral variation like the Bulgarian split squat, and one machine or bodyweight movement for additional volume. Add a plyometric variation if power is part of what you're training for. That combination covers the full spectrum without redundancy.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What is the best variation of squats?
It depends on your goal. The back squat is what most strength programs are built around, but it's not the right starting point for everyone. Beginners do better with a goblet squat. People with lower back issues often get more out of a hack squat or Smith machine squat. There's no single best option — the right variation is the one that fits where you are right now.
2. Which is the hardest squat variation?
For bodyweight, the pistol squat. You're squatting to full depth on one leg with no assistance, which takes strength, ankle mobility, and balance all at once. Most people need months of prep before they can do one cleanly. For loaded variations, the overhead squat is arguably harder — you're holding weight above your head while squatting to depth, which exposes every weakness you have at the same time.
3. Which squat variation builds the most muscle?
The back squat and Bulgarian split squat together cover most of the bases. The back squat lets you move serious weight across both legs; the Bulgarian split squat makes each leg do the work on its own through a full range of motion.
4. Which squat variation is easiest on the knees?
The hack squat machine and Smith machine squat with feet slightly forward are both easy on the knees. The goblet squat is also a solid option — the counterbalance distributes load more evenly and most people find it comfortable right away. Box squats help too, since sitting back keeps your shins more vertical and reduces force through the knee joint.
5. What squat variation hits the glutes the most?
The Bulgarian split squat, especially with your front foot stepped out further, puts your glutes through a longer range of motion than most other variations. Sumo squats also shift more load onto the glutes compared to a standard stance. On a Smith machine, moving your feet forward increases glute activation noticeably — more than you can usually achieve with a free barbell.
References
1. The Journal of Strength & Conditioning Research — A Comparison of Free Weight Squat to Smith Machine Squat Using Electromyography — Found that free-weight squats produced 43% higher average muscle activation across all muscles compared to Smith machine squats, with significant differences in the gastrocnemius, biceps femoris, and vastus medialis.
2. PubMed — Jump Squat Is More Related to Sprinting and Jumping Abilities than Olympic Push Press — Found that jump squat power output correlated strongly with sprint speed, vertical jump, and change of direction performance in elite soccer players, suggesting it is one of the most transfer-efficient power exercises available.
3. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health — The Activation of Gluteal, Thigh, and Lower Back Muscles in Different Squat Variations — Found that front squats produced significantly greater gluteus maximus and gluteus medius activation during the descending phase compared to all back squat variations tested, including full, parallel, sumo, and externally rotated sumo squats.