10 Best Sumo Deadlift With Bands Alternatives for Limited Equipment
If you can’t perform the Sumo Deadlift With Bands, use Romanian deadlifts, single‑leg RDLs, trap bar deadlifts, glute‑ham raises, and kettlebell sumo deadlifts to hit the same hamstrings and glutes. Cue: hinge from the hips, keep a neutral spine, and feel the hamstrings lengthen on the descent to preserve the hip‑dominant pattern.
Original Exercise: Sumo Deadlift With Bands
How to Perform Sumo Deadlift With Bands
- To deadlift with short bands, simply loop them over the bar before you start, and step into them to set up. Ensure that they under the back half of your foot, directly where you are driving into the floor.
- Begin with a bar loaded on the ground. Approach the bar so that the bar intersects the middle of the feet. The feet should be set very wide, near the collars. Bend at the hips to grip the bar. The arms should be directly below the shoulders, inside the legs, and you can use a pronated grip, a mixed grip, or hook grip.
- Take a breath, and then lower your hips, looking forward with your head with your chest up. Drive through the floor, spreading your feet apart, with your weight on the back half of your feet. Extend through the hips and knees.
- As the bar passes through the knees, lean back and drive the hips into the bar, pulling your shoulder blades together.
- Return the weight to the ground by bending at the hips and controlling the weight on the way down.
Pro Tips
- Category: Powerlifting
- Force: Pull
- Movement type: Compound
Best Sumo Deadlift With Bands Alternatives
1. Clean Deadlift
94.9% MatchHow to perform this exercise
- Begin standing with a barbell close to your shins. Your feet should be directly under your hips with your feet turned out slightly. Grip the bar with a double overhand grip or hook grip, about shoulder width apart. Squat down to the bar. Your spine should be in full extension, with a back angle that places your shoulders in front of the bar and your back as vertical as possible.
- Begin by driving through the floor through the front of your heels. As the bar travels upward, maintain a constant back angle. Flare your knees out to the side to help keep them out of the bar's path.
- After the bar crosses the knees, complete the lift by driving the hips into the bar until your hips and knees are extended.
2. Clean
89.6% MatchHow to perform this exercise
- With a barbell on the floor close to the shins, take an overhand (or hook) grip just outside the legs. Lower your hips with the weight focused on the heels, back straight, head facing forward, chest up, with your shoulders just in front of the bar. This will be your starting position.
- Begin the first pull by driving through the heels, extending your knees. Your back angle should stay the same, and your arms should remain straight. Move the weight with control as you continue to above the knees.
- Next comes the second pull, the main source of acceleration for the clean. As the bar approaches the mid-thigh position, begin extending through the hips. In a jumping motion, accelerate by extending the hips, knees, and ankles, using speed to move the bar upward. There should be no need to actively pull through the arms to accelerate the weight; at the end of the second pull, the body should be fully extended, leaning slightly back, with the arms still extended.
- As full extension is achieved, transition into the third pull by aggressively shrugging and flexing the arms with the elbows up and out. At peak extension, aggressively pull yourself down, rotating your elbows under the bar as you do so. Receive the bar in a front squat position, the depth of which is dependent upon the height of the bar at the end of the third pull. The bar should be racked onto the protracted shoulders, lightly touching the throat with the hands relaxed. Continue to descend to the bottom squat position, which will help in the recovery.
3. Axle Deadlift
84.7% MatchHow to perform this exercise
- Approach the bar so that it is centered over your feet. You feet should be about hip width apart. Bend at the hip to grip the bar at shoulder width, allowing your shoulder blades to protract. Typically, you would use an over/under grip.
- With your feet and your grip set, take a big breath and then lower your hips and flex the knees until your shins contact the bar. Look forward with your head, keep your chest up and your back arched, and begin driving through the heels to move the weight upward.
- After the bar passes the knees, aggressively pull the bar back, pulling your shoulder blades together as you drive your hips forward into the bar.
- Lower the bar by bending at the hips and guiding it to the floor.
4. Deadlift With Chains
84.7% MatchHow to perform this exercise
- You can attach the chains to the sleeves of the bar, or just drape the middle over the bar so there is a greater weight increase as you lift.
- Approach the bar so that it is centered over your feet. You feet should be about hip width apart. Bend at the hip to grip the bar at shoulder width, allowing your shoulder blades to protract. Typically, you would use an overhand grip or an over/under grip on heavier sets. With your feet, and your grip set, take a big breath and then lower your hips and bend the knees until your shins contact the bar.
- Look forward with your head, keep your chest up and your back arched, and begin driving through the heels to move the weight upward. After the bar passes the knees, aggressively pull the bar back, pulling your shoulder blades together as you drive your hips forward into the bar.
- Lower the bar by bending at the hips and guiding it to the floor.
5. Deadlift With Bands
84.7% MatchHow to perform this exercise
- To deadlift with short bands, simply loop them over the bar before you start, and step into them to set up. For long bands, they will need to be anchored to a secure base, such as heavy dumbbells or a rack.
- With your feet, and your grip set, take a big breath and then lower your hips and bend the knees until your shins contact the bar. Look forward with your head, keep your chest up and your back arched, and begin driving through the heels to move the weight upward. After the bar passes the knees, aggressively pull the bar back, pulling your shoulder blades together as you drive your hips forward into the bar.
- Lower the bar by bending at the hips and guiding it to the floor.
6. Deficit Deadlift
84.7% MatchHow to perform this exercise
- Begin by having a platform or weight plates that you can stand on, usually 1-3 inches in height. Approach the bar so that it is centered over your feet. You feet should be about hip width apart. Bend at the hip to grip the bar at shoulder width, allowing your shoulder blades to protract. Typically, you would use an overhand grip or an over/under grip on heavier sets.
- With your feet, and your grip set, take a big breath and then lower your hips and bend the knees until your shins contact the bar. Look forward with your head, keep your chest up and your back arched, and begin driving through the heels to move the weight upward. After the bar passes the knees, aggressively pull the bar back, pulling your shoulder blades together as you drive your hips forward into the bar.
- Lower the bar by bending at the hips and guiding it to the floor.
7. Cable Deadlifts
83.6% MatchHow to perform this exercise
- Move the cables to the bottom of the towers and select an appropriate weight. Stand directly in between the uprights.
- To begin, squat down be flexing your hips and knees until you can reach the handles.
- After grasping them, begin your ascent. Driving through your heels extend your hips and knees keeping your hands hanging at your side. Keep your head and chest up throughout the movement.
- After reaching a full standing position, Return to the starting position and repeat.
8. Double Kettlebell Alternating Hang Clean
81.6% MatchHow to perform this exercise
- Place two kettlebells between your feet. To get in the starting position, push your butt back and look straight ahead.
- Clean one kettlebell to your shoulder and hold on to the other kettlebell.
- With a fluid motion, lower the top kettlebell while driving the bottom kettlebell up.
9. Car Deadlift
80.7% MatchHow to perform this exercise
- This event apparatus typically has neutral grip handles, however some have a straight bar that you can approach like a normal deadlift. The apparatus can be loaded with a vehicle or other heavy objects such as tractor tires or kegs.
- Center yourself between the handles if you are a strong squatter, or back a couple inches if you are a strong deadlifter. You feet should be about hip width apart. Bend at the hip to grip the handles. With your feet and your grip set, take a big breath and then lower your hips and flex the knees.
- Look forward with your head, keep your chest up and your back arched, and begin driving through the heels to move the weight upward. As the weight comes up, pull your shoulder blades together as you drive your hips forward.
- Lower the weight by bending at the hips and guiding it to the floor.
10. Barbell Deadlift
79.7% MatchHow to perform this exercise
- Stand with your feet shoulder-width apart and the barbell on the ground in front of you.
- Bend your knees and hinge at the hips to lower your torso and grip the barbell with an overhand grip, hands slightly wider than shoulder-width apart.
- Keep your back straight and chest lifted as you drive through your heels to lift the barbell off the ground, extending your hips and knees.
- As you stand up straight, squeeze your glutes and keep your core engaged.
- Lower the barbell back down to the ground by bending at the hips and knees, keeping your back straight.
Why You Might Need a Sumo Deadlift With Bands Alternative
You might substitute the Sumo Deadlift With Bands because you lack banded equipment, have lower‑back irritation from wide stance loading, or need a different training stimulus. Bands add accommodating resistance, increasing lockout torque and recruiting glutes more as you rise; removing them changes the force curve. Choose exercises that reproduce the hip hinge and long‑hamstring stretch—for example, single‑leg RDLs reduce spinal compression while preserving hip extension demand. Technique cue: push hips back, keep knees softly bent, and drive through the heels to maintain posterior chain activation and minimize lumbar shear.
How to Choose the Right Substitute
Pick a substitute by matching loading pattern, range of motion, and equipment. If you need accommodating resistance, use trap bar deadlifts or heavy RDLs to preserve concentric overload. For reduced spinal load choose single‑leg RDLs or kettlebell sumo deadlifts to keep the hip hinge but lower compressive forces. If you want eccentric emphasis, choose glute‑ham raises or Nordic curls and control the descent for greater hamstring activation. Technique cue: maintain a neutral spine, hinge at the hips, and perform a controlled eccentric to maximize hamstring tension.
Frequently Asked Questions
What muscles does Sumo Deadlift With Bands work?
The lift primarily targets the hamstrings and glutes while also loading the adductors and spinal erectors. Bands increase resistance through the lockout, so you get greater hip‑extensor torque at the top; cue: squeeze the glutes and drive through the heels at lockout to maximize hip extension.
What is the best bodyweight alternative to Sumo Deadlift With Bands?
The Nordic hamstring curl is the top bodyweight substitute for hamstring hypertrophy and eccentric strength. Anchor your ankles, hinge at the hips, and control the forward descent to overload the hamstrings without external loading.
Can I build muscle without doing Sumo Deadlift With Bands?
Yes. You can achieve hypertrophy using alternatives that preserve hip‑dominant loading, progressive overload, and tempo control. Use heavier RDLs, single‑leg variations, or eccentric‑focused sets and track load, reps, or tempo to ensure progressive stimulus.
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