Pick a muscle group or browse all exercises — with instructions, tips, and common mistakes for every movement.
Select Muscle
Click a muscle to browse
Browse by Muscle Group
Browse by Equipment
Browse by Training Style
Quick Start — Workout Splits
Pre-made Dumbbell Workouts
Muscle Group
Equipment
Movement Type
✕ Clear all filters
⌕
0 Exercises
📋 Save as Workout
Clear
◈
Select an exercise to preview
Dumbbell Romanian Deadlift
Similar Exercises
Exercise Ball Leg Curl
Stability Ball · Pull
B
Exercise Ball One Legged Diagonal Kick Hamstring Curl
Stability Ball · Pull
B
Exercise Ball Seated Hamstring Stretch
Stability Ball · Mobility/Flexibility
B
Band Kneeling Rear Kick
Resistance Band · Squat
B
Band Pullthrough
Resistance Band · Squat
B
Band Standing Leg Curl
Resistance Band · Pull
B
Resistance Band Clam
Resistance Band · Squat
B
Resistance Band Kneeling Leg Half Circle
Resistance Band · Squat
B
Home ›
Hamstrings ›
Dumbbell Romanian Deadlift
Dumbbell Romanian Deadlift
HamstringsDumbbellHingeStrength
Your Goal General Fitness
Sets
2–3
Reps
10–15
Rest
60s
How To Perform
1
Stand with feet hip-width apart, barbell over mid-foot.
2
Hinge at the hips and bend the knees to grip the bar just outside your legs.
3
Take a deep breath, brace your core, and keep your chest up.
4
Drive the floor away with your legs while keeping the bar close to your body.
5
Lock out your hips at the top — then hinge back down with control to reset.
Pro Tips
Film yourself from the side — it's the fastest way to spot form issues.
Think about pushing the floor away with your legs rather than pulling the bar up.
Chalk or straps help with grip on heavier sets — don't let grip be the limiting factor.
Overview
A back movement using a dumbbell that loads the back through its full range, with Glutes picking up the supporting work. One of the more effective exercises for building size and strength in this area.
Muscles Worked
Back
75%
Glutes
42%
Hamstrings
32%
Core
22%
Traps
15%
Common Mistakes
Rounding the lower back — the most common and most dangerous mistake on any deadlift variation.
Jerking the bar off the floor instead of applying steady pressure.
Looking up too aggressively — keep a neutral neck, not forced extension.
About Training Your Hamstrings
The hamstrings run down the back of the thigh and perform two jobs: bending the knee and extending the hip. Strong hamstrings balance the quads, protect the knee, and are essential for sprinting and powerful hip extension.
Train them with two movement types. Knee-flexion work — lying and seated leg curls — targets the hamstrings directly, while hip-hinge movements like the Romanian deadlift, good morning, and Nordic curl load them through a powerful stretch. Combining both builds fuller, more resilient hamstrings than curls alone.
On hinges, push the hips back with a flat back and feel the stretch rather than rounding the spine. A slow lowering phase dramatically increases the training effect.