Your squat feels strong, but it’s turning into a good morning. Your deadlift falls apart because you’re losing position, or your bentover row becomes a hybrid upright row-and-shrug because your lower back says no.
Sound familiar? Many jump to the same conclusion: “My lower back is weak.”
Sometimes that’s true, but more often the issue isn’t strength, and that’s where this conversation gets interesting.
The lower back is one of the most misunderstood areas in strength training. Many people act as if the spine is too fragile to round or flex, or to tolerate fatigue. Others believe the answer is going heavier until it “toughens up.”
The truth lies somewhere in the middle.
To find that middle ground, we’re going to break down some important elements, including:
- why the lower back often become the limiting factor
- whether it needs strength, endurance, or both
- the biggest myth surrounding lower-back training
- and how to build a lower back that’s resilient
Let’s dive in.
The Lower Back’s Function
The lower back has several key roles, including being able to:
- maintain spinal position
- resist unwanted movement
- and transfer force between the upper and lower body.
During a heavy squat, for example, your lower back is working to prevent it from becoming a good morning, so it often has to do so for the entire set without rest. “The lower back’s primary role is often resisting spinal flexion, resisting rotation, maintaining posture, and transferring force,” explains physical therapist and training expert Dr. Justin Farnsworth.
That’s why poor bracing and positioning show up so quickly under fatigue because the lower back is taking on extra work. Once the stabilizers lose their ability to maintain
position, the technique begins to fail. “You can’t fire a cannon from a canoe,” says top performance coach Dan Swinscoe.
Most experts will say that the lower back is often compensating for something else. “The lower back is often the meeting point between force production and force transfer,” says strength coach Tasha Whelan,
That’s why if your hips lack mobility, your core doesn’t fire, or your bracing is poor, the lumbar spine starts taking on stress it was never supposed to handle alone. Many lifters don’t necessarily have weak lower backs.
They have backs that are:
- poorly positioned
- fatigued
- or constantly compensating.
And that distinction matters because it changes the solution entirely.
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What To Do For Lower Back Pain
The worst thing to do when experiencing lower-back pain is panic. But it happens anyway (and I know because I’m one of those complainers).
The moment someone’s lower back hurts, the bro-science advice starts flying:
- “Stop lifting.”
- “Deadlifts are bad for your back.”
- “You should get an MRI.”
It may be well meaning, but these suggestions oftentimes ignore context, movement quality, loading strategy, fatigue, and individual tolerance. Worse, it often creates fear around movement itself. “Low back pain is a generic problem with a generic answer,” explains Farnsworth. “Rest. Modify. Wait it out. Hope it resolves.”
But smarter coaches start asking better questions.
Where is the pain exactly? What movement triggered it? Does it happen under load, fatigue, or certain positions? Is it sharp, dull, muscular, or nerve-like? According to physical therapist and coach Bo Babenko, this matters because pain is often more about how someone moves than about what exercise they’re doing. “Pain is a signal and request for change,” he explains.
Lower back pain doesn’t automatically mean damage. Sometimes it means:
- it’s too much weight
- positioning broke down
- you’re under recovered.
That’s why, when experiencing an episode of lower back pain, it’s important to consider the weights you’re using, your core stability, whether you’re tired, and whether you lack mobility. “Most people don’t need less movement,” explains Whelan. “They need better organized movement and a more appropriate dosage.”
Sometimes the issue isn’t even the lower back.
That’s why these coaches, working with clients who present with lower back pain, don’t just program exercises—they program positions. “Most coaches program exercises,” says Farnsworth. “Smart coaches program positions.”
Often, the goal isn’t to remove movement. It’s finding the position where the body can continue training while symptoms calm down and resilience improves. (More on that later.)
Is Your Lower Back Weak or Just Fatigued?
If the lower back isn’t the prime mover, why does it so often become the muscle that fails first?
During exercise, at which the lower back takes a supporting role, it’s under constant tension. While your quads, glutes, or lats contract and lengthen, your spinal erectors are often locked into a prolonged isometric contraction, maintaining posture and position.
Unlike the glutes and quads in a squat, the lower back rarely gets a chance to rest during the set. Then fatigue builds, form breaks down, and the spine begins to compensate. According to Whelan, “Many people fatigue their spinal stabilizers before the prime movers.”
That’s why someone can have strong legs and glutes but still feel their lower back giving out first. Eventually, the spine becomes the weakest link, not because it lacks strength, but because it can no longer maintain position under repeated stress.
That’s why the lower back often becomes the limiting factor.
Lower Back Strength vs. Endurance: Which Matters More?
Lower-back strength is the ability to produce high levels of force briefly, such as during max-effort deadlifts. This type of training matters because a stronger lower back improves force production and stiffness under load. If your erectors lack strength, heavy compound lifts will expose it fast.
But here’s the catch: Many lifters aren’t struggling to produce force but failing to maintain position. That’s where endurance comes in. Endurance is the ability to maintain spinal control repeatedly under fatigue.
Your first few reps look great. Then fatigue creeps in, and the brace softens, the torso angle changes, the spinal position deteriorates, and compensation starts. That’s not always a strength problem. It’s often an endurance problem.
“In short, you need both,” explains Whelan. “But I usually prioritize endurance and positional control first.” Swinscoe arrives at a similar conclusion. “My answer is endurance for most people.” But coaches like Babenko take a more nuanced route: “The real focus depends on the task or sport.”
A powerlifter pulling maximal singles needs more strength emphasis, whereas a general-population client struggling through high-rep training often needs endurance and positional control first.
But what does the research say? Spine researcher Stuart McGill has long emphasized the importance of spinal stiffness, motor control, and endurance capacity for back health and performance. Still, the classic evidence for endurance begins with Biering-Sørensen’s work. In the 1984 Spine study, Biering-Sørensen found that good isometric endurance of the back muscles was associated with a lower risk of first-time low back trouble among men over the following year. The Biering-Sørensen test has since become a common reference tool for evaluating low back endurance. A 1999 study found that the test provides reliable measures of position-holding and can discriminate between people with and without nonspecific low-back pain.
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How to Build a Stronger, More Resilient Lower Back
Start with endurance and control before chasing heavier lower-back strength work.
Strength is always important, but if you struggle to complete a set of high-rep squats due to lower-back issues, adding more load usually exposes the same compensation pattern—just louder. “If someone cannot maintain position, pressure, and control,” says Whelan. “Adding maximal strength work usually exposes compensation.”
That’s the heart of it. Build the ability to hold good positions first, then layer strength on top. That trains the lower back to do its job without stealing the show.
For most lifters, the order should be: control first, endurance second, strength third. Learn to brace, maintain posture, and resist unwanted movement. Then build the endurance to hold those positions under fatigue. Once that foundation is in place, heavier RDLs, good mornings, back extensions, and pulls are much more likely to build strength rather than feed compensation.
But what if you’re suffering now?
Rather than stopping to wait for the storm to pass, Farnsworth floats the idea of position bias and of what the spine can tolerate without pain. “Position of bias is not an exercise,” explains Farnsworth. “It’s a lens through which every exercise is viewed.”
This refers to spinal position, bracing quality, accumulated fatigue, and whether the movement matches what the body can currently tolerate.
Farnsworth argues you should stop asking, “What exercise should I remove?” and start asking, “What position can you tolerate under load?”
He goes on to explain that some lifters tolerate more upright, extension-oriented positions and may feel better with front squats, goblet squats, chest-supported rows, and front-rack carries. Others tolerate more hip-dominant positions and do better with back squats, Romanian deadlifts, conventional deadlifts, and farmer carries.
Here, Farnsworth provides you with more examples.
Extension-bias (flexion-intolerant): The spine doesn’t tolerate sitting, deep hinging, or sustained flexion. Program patterns that keep the load anterior or overhead, demanding a tall, slightly extended spine.
Pattern
Extension-bias choice
Squat
Front squat/goblet squat
Hinge
Hip thrust/glute bridge
Lunge
Goblet split squat
Push
Push-up/strict press
Pull
Chest-supported row
Carry
Front-rack or overhead carry
Flexion-bias (extension-intolerant): The spine doesn’t tolerate standing, walking, or end-range extension. Program patterns that allow mildly loaded flexion through the range.
Pattern
Extension-bias choice
Squat
Barbell back squat
Hinge
RDL / conventional deadlift
Lunge
Reverse lunge / RFE split squat.
Push
Feet-elevated bench press (avoids extension compensation)
Pull
Deficit DB row / unsupported row
Carry
Farmer’s carry at the sides
The Biggest Lower Back Training Myth Holding You Back
If there’s one myth that should be erased from the fitness industry tomorrow, it would be this:
The lower back is fragile.
You’ve been taught to fear bending, loading, rotation, and almost any movement that challenges the lumbar spine. Over time, many people begin treating their backs like fragile glass. The irony? That fear can become more limiting—and sometimes more harmful—than the movement they’re trying to avoid
People stop training. They avoid exercises they enjoy. They become hypervigilant about every sensation in their back. “Most people have been taught to fear bending, loading, rotation, or spinal stress entirely. In reality, the human spine is incredibly adaptable and resilient when progressively exposed to stress appropriately,” emphasizes Whelan.
That’s a message more lifters need to hear.
Another message you need to hear is this. Pain and damage are not always the same thing. “Back pain does not mean you have a ‘bad back,” explains Swinscoe. Swinscoe adds that over 60% of people who feel great and have no history of back pain have diagnosable disc problems on MRI.
That statement flies in the face of what many lifters believe. They feel pain, assume something broke, and begin avoiding movement altogether. But the spine is remarkably adaptable when exposed to appropriate loading over time.
Main takeaway: You don’t need to treat the lower back with kid gloves. It needs to be exposed to appropriate stress, taught to maintain position under fatigue, and supported by strong, mobile hips and a rock-solid core.
Coach-Approved Lower Back Exercises for Lifters
Swinscoe didn’t choose a back extension, deadlift, or good morning. Instead, he likes the Single-leg kettlebell overhead press. The exercise simultaneously challenges balance, core stiffness, shoulder stability, and frontal-plane control. As the kettlebell gets heavier, maintaining posture and resisting unwanted movement becomes the real challenge.
“As the weight gets heavier, the limiter will be your core, not your arms,” says Swinscoe.
Perform these early in your workout for 2-4 sets of 10-15 reps per side.
Whelan loves the dumbbell Romanian Deadlift as her go-to lower-back exercise. She says it teaches proper hinge mechanics while exposing the lower back to the exact quality many lifters lack: sustained tension under fatigue. “A lot of people don’t necessarily have ‘weak’ backs,” explains Whelan. “They have backs that fatigue quickly because they’ve never learned how to maintain tension, organize posture, and sustain a hinge pattern under load.”
The beauty of the dumbbell RDL is that the lower back works isometrically while the hips move dynamically around it. The lifter learns how to brace, maintain posture, and resist fatigue without chasing maximal loads. Whelan recommends 3-4 sets of 10-15 reps early on in your training.
Babenko took an even broader view. He wants you to improve hip mobility, particularly hip internal and external rotation. His go-to is the 90/90 hip rotation to improve hip movement so the lower back doesn’t have to compensate. His philosophy is simple: “If you train everything around it, the lower back generally does its job,” he says.
When you look at all three exercises, a common theme emerges. None of these coaches is trying to isolate the lower back and beat it into submission. Instead, they’re teaching the body to maintain position, transfer force efficiently, and tolerate load by improving movement quality.
How to Keep Your Lower Back Healthy for Life
If you remember one thing, remember this: your lower back is stronger, tougher, and more adaptable than most people give it credit for. It isn’t fragile. It isn’t doomed because an MRI found a disc bulge. And it doesn’t need to be bubble wrapped every time you approach a barbell. Like every other part of the body, it adapts to the stresses placed upon it when those stresses are applied intelligently and progressively.
So before you blame your lower back for holding back your lifting, ask yourself a better question: Is my lower back weak, or is it simply the first thing to fatigue?
The answer to that question will change how you train.

