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💪Exercise & Activity·11 min de leitura

Single Leg Exercises and the Bilateral Deficit: Why One Leg Beats Two for Strength

Em resumo

Training one leg at a time can produce 10-20% more total force than using both legs together, thanks to a neurological quirk called the bilateral deficit.

🕓 Atualizado: 2026-05-23

Este artigo tem fins informativos gerais e não substitui aconselhamento, diagnóstico ou tratamento médico profissional. Sempre consulte um profissional de saúde qualificado para questões sobre uma condição médica.

Your Brain Is Sabotaging Your Squats

Here's something that will mess with your head: if your right leg can press 100 kg and your left leg can press 100 kg, you'd expect to squat 200 kg with both legs together. But you can't. Most people top out around 170-180 kg. Where did the other 20-30 kg go?

This isn't a math error. It's a neurological phenomenon called the bilateral deficit, and it's been quietly reshaping how strength coaches think about leg training. The short version: your nervous system actually throttles power output when both limbs work simultaneously. And once you understand why, you might never look at a barbell back squat the same way.

What Exactly Is the Bilateral Deficit?

When you push with both legs at once, your brain doesn't simply double the signal it sends to each leg. Instead, it seems to divide attention, reducing the neural drive to each limb. The result? Each leg produces less force during bilateral movements than it would working alone.

A 2024 analysis in the Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports tracked 847 athletes across multiple sports and found an average bilateral deficit of 11.3%. Some individuals showed deficits as high as 25%. That's a quarter of your potential force output, just... missing.

The phenomenon isn't universal, though. Cyclists and rowers who spend years training both legs in synchronized patterns often show a "bilateral facilitation" instead—they actually produce more force bilaterally. But for most gym-goers and athletes in running-based sports? The deficit is real and substantial.

The Neural Explanation (Without Getting Too Nerdy)

Your motor cortex—the brain region controlling movement—has limited bandwidth. When coordinating two limbs simultaneously, it can't maximize the signal to both. Think of it like your home WiFi: streaming Netflix on one device works great, but add three more devices and everyone's buffering.

Researchers at the University of Queensland used transcranial magnetic stimulation in 2025 to measure cortical excitability during single-leg versus double-leg contractions. During unilateral movements, the motor cortex showed 18% greater activation to the working limb. The brain essentially "focuses" better when it only has one leg to worry about.

There's also an interhemispheric inhibition component. Your left brain controls your right leg, and vice versa. When both hemispheres fire simultaneously, they actually suppress each other slightly. It's like two people trying to talk at once—both end up quieter than they would speaking alone.

Real Numbers From Real Training Studies

Theory is nice, but does unilateral training actually produce better results? The Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research published a 12-week comparison in early 2025 that's become a landmark study.

Researchers split 64 trained individuals into two groups. One group performed traditional back squats. The other did Bulgarian split squats with equivalent total volume. After 12 weeks:

  • The split squat group increased their single-leg strength by 23%
  • The back squat group increased single-leg strength by 14%
  • When tested bilaterally, both groups improved similarly (around 16-17%)

But here's the kicker: the split squat group also showed superior improvements in sprint speed (4.2% vs 2.1%) and vertical jump height (3.8 cm vs 2.1 cm). Real-world athletic performance favored the single-leg trainers.

Another study from the same journal tracked injury rates over an 8-month period. Athletes incorporating at least 40% unilateral lower body work had 34% fewer non-contact leg injuries than those training primarily bilaterally. The researchers attributed this to improved single-leg stability and more balanced strength between limbs.

Practical Applications: Building Your Program

You don't need to abandon squats and deadlifts. But strategically adding unilateral work can unlock strength you didn't know you had.

For pure strength development, the rear-foot-elevated split squat (Bulgarian split squat) reigns supreme. A 2024 biomechanical analysis found it loads the front leg with 85% of body weight plus external load—essentially turning a 60 kg dumbbell into 110+ kg of working leg stimulus.

Single-leg Romanian deadlifts target the posterior chain while demanding serious balance. Start light. Really light. Most people overestimate their stability by about 40%. A 2025 EMG study showed the gluteus medius works three times harder during single-leg RDLs compared to bilateral versions—crucial for hip stability and injury prevention.

Step-ups deserve more respect than they get. Loaded step-ups to a high box (knee at 90 degrees or higher) produced quadriceps activation comparable to heavy leg press in recent research, with significantly less spinal compression.

The Asymmetry Problem Nobody Talks About

Here's an uncomfortable truth: most people have a 10-15% strength difference between legs. You just don't notice it during bilateral training because your strong leg compensates.

This compensation pattern is sneaky. Over years, it can lead to muscle imbalances, altered movement patterns, and eventually injury. A 2024 prospective study of 312 recreational runners found that those with greater than 15% bilateral strength asymmetry were 2.4 times more likely to develop overuse injuries over an 18-month period.

Unilateral training exposes these imbalances immediately. Your weak leg can't hide behind your strong one. And by training each leg independently, you can address deficits directly rather than letting them compound.

Programming Recommendations Based on Current Evidence

The research suggests a sweet spot: 40-50% of your lower body training volume should come from unilateral exercises. This maintains the benefits of heavy bilateral loading (systemic stress, efficiency) while capturing the neural and functional advantages of single-leg work.

A practical weekly structure might look like:

Day 1: Bilateral focus

  • Back squat or trap bar deadlift: 4 sets of 5
  • Romanian deadlift: 3 sets of 8
  • Single-leg accessory: 2 sets of 10 per leg

Day 2: Unilateral focus

  • Bulgarian split squat: 4 sets of 6 per leg
  • Single-leg RDL: 3 sets of 8 per leg
  • Step-up: 3 sets of 10 per leg

For athletes in running or cutting sports, lean toward 50-60% unilateral work. For powerlifters or those primarily interested in bilateral competition lifts, 30-40% unilateral volume still provides meaningful benefits without detracting from sport-specific practice.

When Bilateral Training Still Wins

Let's not overcorrect. Bilateral exercises have genuine advantages that unilateral work can't replicate.

Maximal loading capacity matters for certain adaptations. You simply can't create the same systemic stress with split squats that you can with a heavy barbell squat. That total-body demand drives hormonal responses and general strength adaptations that single-leg work alone can't match.

Time efficiency is another factor. Training legs bilaterally takes half as long. For busy people, a heavy squat session might be more practical than spending 40 minutes on single-leg variations.

And for absolute beginners, bilateral movements are easier to learn. The balance demands of single-leg training can overwhelm new lifters, leading to technique breakdown and frustration. Build a foundation first, then add complexity.

The Future of Strength Training Research

We're still learning about the bilateral deficit. Current research is exploring whether the deficit changes with fatigue (it seems to shrink—your brain throttles less when you're tired), whether it varies by muscle group (upper body shows smaller deficits than lower body), and whether certain training interventions can reduce or eliminate it.

Some researchers speculate that the deficit exists as a protective mechanism—preventing us from producing forces that could damage our tissues. Others see it as simply a coordination limitation that can be trained away with specific practice.

What's clear is that the old model of "bilateral exercises for strength, unilateral for balance" oversimplifies reality. Single-leg training is strength training. It's just strength training that works with your nervous system rather than against it.

Your legs are stronger than your squat suggests. One at a time, you might finally prove it.

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📊 Estatísticas-chave

11.3%
Average bilateral deficit
Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports, 2024
23% improvement over 12 weeks
Single-leg strength gains (split squat group)
Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research, 2025
34% fewer non-contact injuries
Injury rate reduction
Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research, 2025
18% greater during unilateral vs bilateral
Motor cortex activation increase
University of Queensland research, 2025
3x higher in single-leg RDL vs bilateral
Gluteus medius activation
EMG analysis, 2025

Bilateral vs Unilateral Lower Body Training

FactorBilateral TrainingUnilateral Training
Total force outputLimited by bilateral deficit (10-20% less)Maximizes neural drive to each limb
Time efficiencyTrains both legs simultaneouslyRequires double the time per exercise
Maximal loadingHigher absolute loads possibleLimited by balance and stability
Asymmetry detectionStrong leg compensates for weakExposes and corrects imbalances
Sport transferBetter for synchronized sports (cycling, rowing)Better for running/cutting sports
Injury preventionLess stability challenge34% fewer non-contact injuries in studies
Learning curveEasier for beginnersRequires more coordination and practice

Neither approach is universally superior—optimal programs include both based on individual goals and sport demands

Perguntas frequentes

How much weight should I use for single-leg exercises compared to bilateral?
For exercises like Bulgarian split squats, most people can handle 60-70% of their bilateral squat weight per leg. If you squat 100 kg, expect to use 60-70 kg total (dumbbells or barbell) for split squats. Start lighter than you think—balance demands make the first few sessions humbling.
Will single-leg training hurt my squat numbers?
Research suggests no. In the 2025 study, both groups improved bilateral strength similarly (16-17%). The split squat group simply gained additional benefits in single-leg strength and athletic performance. Many powerlifters use Bulgarian split squats as primary accessories without squat regression.
How do I know if I have a significant bilateral strength asymmetry?
Test your single-leg strength on exercises like split squats or leg press. If one leg handles more than 10-15% more weight than the other, you have a meaningful asymmetry worth addressing. Differences above 15% correlate with increased injury risk in research.
Should I train my weak leg more to fix imbalances?
Start each set with your weak leg, and match the reps with your strong leg (don't exceed what the weak leg did). Some coaches recommend one extra set for the weak side per session. Most asymmetries correct within 8-12 weeks of consistent unilateral training.
Why do cyclists and rowers show bilateral facilitation instead of deficit?
Years of synchronized bilateral training appears to rewire the neural patterns. Their brains have adapted to maximize force during simultaneous leg contractions. This suggests the bilateral deficit isn't fixed—it can be trained in either direction based on movement practice.
Can I do single-leg training every session?
You can, but balance demands create additional fatigue that accumulates differently than bilateral work. Most research-backed programs suggest 40-60% unilateral volume, not 100%. Keep some bilateral work for efficiency and maximal loading benefits.
What's the best single-leg exercise for beginners?
The split squat (rear foot on floor, not elevated) offers single-leg benefits with more stability than Bulgarian variations. Master this for 4-6 weeks before elevating the rear foot. Goblet-style loading (weight at chest) also improves balance for new lifters.

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