Walking is a series of single-leg stances. Every step requires your body to balance on one leg while the other swings forward. Exercises that train this specifically – not just general strength – are the most direct path to better balance and fewer falls.
Why Single-Leg Work Is Different
Bilateral exercises – squats, leg press, seated machines – build strength but don’t train the stabilization patterns that matter for real-world balance. Leg strength on a machine doesn’t translate to the stability needed when standing on one foot.
Single-leg exercises force the hip stabilizers, ankle stabilizers, and core to work together the way they do during walking and stair climbing. The balance demand is the training stimulus – it can’t be replicated by any seated or machine exercise.
Research supports this distinction: balance training programs that include progressive single-leg work reduce fall risk significantly more than general fitness programs that don’t include it.
Where to Start
Tandem stance – one foot directly in front of the other, heel touching toe – is the first progression for women who find single-leg standing difficult. It challenges balance without the full demand of single-leg stance.
Single-leg stance should progress from supported (holding a counter or wall) to unsupported, then to unsupported with eyes closed, then to unsupported on a slightly uneven surface. Each progression adds balance challenge without requiring more strength.
The Most Functional Exercises
Step-ups are the most functionally important single-leg exercise. Every stair you climb is a step-up. Progressively loading step-ups – adding dumbbell weight as you get stronger – builds the hip extension strength and single-leg stability that transfers most directly to real-world function.
Split squats and reverse lunges develop strength through single-leg ranges of motion without requiring the full balance challenge of unsupported single-leg stance, which makes them useful when strength is the current limiting factor rather than balance itself.
The Mistake to Avoid
The most common mistake: staying at bodyweight indefinitely. Bodyweight step-ups and split squats are a useful starting point. Staying there for months produces minimal ongoing adaptation. Adding a dumbbell in each hand – and increasing it as you get stronger – is what drives the hip and glute strength gains that matter for fall prevention.
The second mistake: avoiding single-leg work because it feels unstable. That instability is the training stimulus. Working at the edge of your current balance capacity is what improves it.
