Banded Glute Bridge
for True Glute Activation & Hip Stability
The glute bridge is one of the most commonly prescribed rehab exercises — and one of the most commonly performed incorrectly. Dr. Dockery’s banded version emphasizes foot tripod mechanics, abdominal pressure, and outward knee drive to shift the load to the glutes, not the hamstrings or low back.

What Is the Banded Glute Bridge?
The Banded Glute Bridge is a supine hip extension exercise performed with a resistance loop band around the knees. While glute bridges are extremely common in rehab and fitness settings, small errors in foot positioning and load distribution dramatically change which muscles actually do the work — and most people default to their hamstrings and low back rather than their glutes.
This version addresses that by layering three specific technique elements that together shift the movement to the glutes: a foot tripod (stable base of support through the foot), 360-degree abdominal pressure (core engagement that prevents lumbar extension compensation), and outward knee drive against the band (hip abductor co-activation that recruits the posterior glute rather than the hamstrings alone).
According to NIH research on glute activation strategies, the addition of hip abduction resistance during the bridge significantly increases gluteus maximus and medius EMG activity compared to standard bridges — making the banded version a materially more effective glute exercise than its unbanded counterpart.
Clinical note: The banded glute bridge is typically prescribed as a progression from the Banded Clam, which establishes glute medius activation in a non-weight-bearing position. Once the patient can reliably feel and activate the glute medius, the bridge trains both glute max and medius together in a movement pattern that transfers directly to standing, walking, and athletic activity.
Common Conditions This Exercise Addresses
Why foot loading changes everything: When weight shifts into the heels during a bridge, the hamstrings become the primary hip extensor because they are in the best mechanical position to pull from a heel-loaded posture. When weight is centered through the mid-foot (the foot tripod), the glutes become the dominant hip extensor. This is why foot position — not just “squeezing the glutes” — is central to making the bridge work as intended.
Step-by-Step Instructions
Set up with the band around the knees
Place a resistance loop band just above the knees. Lie on your back with knees bent and feet flat on the floor, hip-width apart. Let your arms rest at your sides with palms facing down for stability.
Create the foot tripod
Spread all five toes wide and press them actively into the floor. Create a stable three-point contact through the ball of the foot (under the big toe), the ball of the foot (under the little toe), and the center of the heel. This is your foot tripod — the base from which the glutes load. Keep pressure centered through the mid-foot, not pushed back into the heels.
Create 360-degree abdominal pressure
Before moving, gently expand the belly outward in all directions — front, sides, and toward the floor — to create intra-abdominal pressure. This stabilizes the pelvis and prevents the low back from extending to compensate when the hips rise. Maintain this pressure throughout every rep.
Drive the knees gently outward against the band
Apply light outward pressure against the resistance band — not enough to let the feet collapse inward, just enough to feel the outer hip muscles engage. This outward drive recruits the glute medius and shifts activation toward the posterior glute rather than the hamstrings. Hold this pressure throughout the movement.
Squeeze the glutes and lift the hips
Consciously squeeze the glutes — think about squeezing the back of the hip — and drive the hips upward into a bridge. The goal is a straight line from shoulders to knees at the top. Rise slowly and under control, taking about 2 seconds to reach the top position.
Hold briefly and lower slowly
Pause for 1–2 seconds at the top with the glutes actively squeezed. Then lower the hips slowly (2–3 seconds) back toward the floor — but don’t fully rest between reps. Maintaining a small amount of tension at the bottom keeps the glutes loaded through the set.
Common compensation: Feeling excessive cramping or tension in the hamstrings, or feeling the low back working hard at the top, are signs that weight has shifted into the heels or that the abdominal pressure has been lost. Reset the foot tripod, re-engage the core, and ensure the knee drive remains active before continuing.
Key Technique Points
Watch the Technique
Why This Exercise Works
Frequently Asked Questions
This content is for educational purposes only. Stop if symptoms worsen or pain develops, and consult Dr. Dockery if you are unsure whether this exercise is appropriate for your condition.
Build a Stronger Foundation in Livonia, MI
The banded glute bridge is most effective as part of a complete glute activation and rehabilitation program. Dr. Dockery serves patients throughout Livonia, Farmington Hills, Redford, Plymouth, and greater Wayne County.

