Ankle Weights: Benefits, Downsides, And Exercises To Get Started

Healthline
  • Health Conditions

    Health Conditions

    All
    • Breast Cancer
    • Cancer Care
    • Caregiving for Alzheimer's Disease
    • Chronic Kidney Disease
    • Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)
    • Digestive Health
    • Eye Health
    • Heart Health
    • Menopause
    • Mental Health
    • Migraine
    • Multiple Sclerosis (MS)
    • Parkinson’s Disease
    • Psoriasis
    • Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA)
    • Sleep Health
    • Type 2 Diabetes
    • Weight Management

    Condition Spotlight

    All
    • Controlling Ulcerative Colitis
    • Navigating Life with Bipolar Disorder
    • Mastering Geographic Atrophy
    • Managing Type 2 Diabetes
  • Wellness

    Wellness Topics

    All
    • CBD
    • Fitness
    • Healthy Aging
    • Hearing
    • Mental Well-Being
    • Nutrition
    • Parenthood
    • Recipes
    • Sexual Health
    • Skin Care
    • Sleep Health
    • Vitamins and Supplements
    • Women's Wellness

    Product Reviews

    All
    • At-Home Testing
    • Men's Health
    • Mental Health
    • Nutrition
    • Sleep
    • Vitamins and Supplements
    • Women's Health

    Featured Programs

    All
    • Your Guide to Glucose Health
    • Inflammation and Aging
    • Cold & Flu Season Survival Guide
    • She’s Good for Real
  • Tools

    Featured

    • Video Series
    • Pill Identifier
    • FindCare
    • Drugs A-Z
    • Medicare Plans by State

    Lessons

    All
    • Crohn’s and Ulcerative Colitis Essentials
    • Diabetes Nutrition
    • High Cholesterol
    • Taming Inflammation in Psoriasis
    • Taming Inflammation in Psoriatic Arthritis

    Newsletters

    All
    • Anxiety and Depression
    • Digestive Health
    • Heart Health
    • Migraine
    • Nutrition Edition
    • Type 2 Diabetes
    • Wellness Wire

    Lifestyle Quizzes

    • Find a Diet
    • Find Healthy Snacks
    • Weight Management
    • How Well Do You Sleep?
    • Are You a Workaholic?
  • Featured

    Health News

    All
    • Medicare 2026 Changes
    • Can 6-6-6 Walking Workout Help You Lose Weight?
    • This Couple Lost 118 Pounds Together Without Medication
    • 5 Science-Backed Ways to Live a Longer Life
    • Morning Coffee May Help You Live Longer

    This Just In

    • 5 Tips for a Healthy Lifestyle
    • How to Disinfect Your House After the Flu
    • Best Vegan and Plant-Based Meal Delivery for 2025
    • Does Medicare Cover Pneumonia Shots?
    • Chromosomes, Genetics, and Your Health

    Top Reads

    • Best Multivitamins for Women
    • Best Multivitamins for Men
    • Best Online Therapy Services
    • Online Therapy That Takes Insurance
    • Buy Ozempic Online
    • Mounjaro Overview

    Video Series

    • Youth in Focus
    • Healthy Harvest
    • Through an Artist's Eye
    • Future of Health
  • Connect

    Find Your Bezzy Community

    Bezzy communities provide meaningful connections with others living with chronic conditions. Join Bezzy on the web or mobile app.

    All
    • Inflammatory Bowel Disease
    • Multiple Sclerosis
    • Depression
    • Migraine
    • Type 2 Diabetes
    • Psoriasis

    Follow us on social media

    Can't get enough? Connect with us for all things health.

Subscribe

Nutrition

  • Meal Kits
    • Overview
    • Diets
    • Meal Kits
    • Prepared Meals
    • Comparisons
    • Grocery Delivery
  • Special Diets
  • Healthy Eating
  • Food Freedom
  • Conditions
  • Feel Good Food
  • Products
  • Vitamins & Supplements
  • Sustainability
  • Weight Management

Nutrition

Evidence BasedAnkle Weights: Benefits and How to Get the Most Out of ThemMedically reviewed by Jake Tipane, CPTWritten by Tyler Read, BSc, CPT on March 15, 2021
  • Research
  • How to use
  • Exercises
  • Downsides
  • Bottom line

Ankle weights are a commonly used training device marketed to the general population as a way to improve fitness during day-to-day activities.

Most ankle weights are designed as mini sandbags you attach around your ankles with a Velcro strap.

The typical weights range from 1–3 pounds (roughly 0.5–1.5 kg) and can be used during everyday activities or incorporated into a workout routine.

While ankle weights have not been studied as extensively as other common methods of fitness training, research suggests they may be beneficial for improving your walking dynamics and helping reduce body fat and cardiovascular disease risk (1, 2).

Furthermore, for older adults, wearing properly weighted ankle weights may improve knee joint repositioning and may be beneficial for improving balance in individuals recovering from stroke events (3, 4).

Overall, ankle weights offer some benefit to general fitness and can be safely used by healthy individuals.

That said, they’re far from a complete fitness solution and are best utilized as part of a program that also incorporates weight training and aerobic exercise.

woman putting on ankle weightsShare on Pinterest
Mosuno/Stocksy United

The research on ankle weights

Ankle weights are not a new invention. Research on ankle weights dates to 1990 and earlier (5).

While there’s less research on ankle weights as a training method compared with other fitness training methods, recent research suggests ankle weights are beneficial for several different applications.

Clinical use of ankle weights

The primary use for ankle weights in a clinical setting is for improving:

  • walking gait in older adults
  • balance rehabilitation in people who have experienced a stroke

For example, a 2016 study found that using a combined ankle weight of 0.5%, 1%, and 1.5% of a subject’s body mass lowered errors in knee joint repositioning in older adults when compared to no resistance (3).

According to the study, the 1% ankle weight group performed the best, though all weighted groups showed improvement.

A different study on stroke rehabilitation patients showed that adding 3–5% of individuals’ body weight in ankle weights on the stroke-affected side leg improved the patients’ ability to balance (4).

As such, ankle weights may be a promising rehabilitation solution for people who’ve experienced a stroke and a tool for gait improvement in older adults.

While these studies are promising, you should always consult your healthcare provider before attempting any intervention for medical issues.

Ankle weights for general fitness improvements

When it comes to general fitness for noninjured individuals, ankle weights may be beneficial as well.

For example, a 2016 Malaysian study found that wearing 0.5-kg (1.1-pound) ankle and wrist weights 3 times per week for 20 minutes lowered participants’ waist circumference, waist-to-hip ratio, and body fat percentage by the end of the 6-month study period (6).

While more research is required to replicate these results, this study suggests that ankle weights may be a useful tool for improving these health measures.

Finally, a 2017 study on walking mechanics in otherwise healthy adults found that ankle weights using 1–2% of a person’s body weight “can be effective for enhancing the walking factors of adults without symptoms” (7).

Overall, the research suggests that ankle weights may be beneficial for noninjured adults for both fitness and movement improvements, although further study is needed.

Summary

Scientific evidence suggests that ankle weights may be useful in both clinical and general fitness settings.

Always consult your healthcare provider before attempting any rehabilitation program.

The best ways to use ankle weights

With the research in mind, the following are a few suggestions for incorporating ankle weights into your fitness program:

  • Select a combined ankle weight between 1% and 2% of your body weight.
  • Wear the weights around your ankles at least 3 times per week for a minimum of 20 minutes per session.
  • Consider adding ankle weights when doing slower walks for enhanced movement quality.
  • Only wear ankle weights for limited periods to avoid overuse injuries and imbalances.
  • Don’t exceed 3% of your body weight in ankle weights.
  • Incrementally increase the weight to avoid overuse injuries.

Ankle weights should be worn for short periods a few days per week.

There isn’t enough scientific evidence to make further claims, but any fitness tool can lead to overuse injuries if you do too much (8).

Ankle weight exercises

The following four exercises target your hips and glutes and utilize ankle weights for resistance.

Single-leg glute bridge

To do this exercise:

  1. Lie on your back and bring your heels in toward your hips.
  2. Extend one leg straight in the air.
  3. With your nonextended leg, press against the floor evenly with your foot to raise your hips off the ground.
  4. Contract your glutes at the top of the position, then gently return your hips to the ground.
  5. Repeat on the other side.

Prone hamstring curl

To do this exercise:

  1. Lie on your stomach, with your legs extended behind you and your toes on the floor.
  2. Extend your hands out in front of you for stability.
  3. Slowly curl one leg up by bending it at the knee and raising your foot until your shin forms a 90-degree angle with the floor.
  4. Slowly return to the start position. Aim to keep your hips and pelvis on the ground for proper form.
  5. Repeat on the other side.

Side-lying hip abduction

To do this exercise:

  1. Lie on your side, with your bottom elbow and upper arm on the ground and your head supported in your hand.
  2. Bend your bottom leg to 90 degrees for stability.
  3. Keep your top leg straight and slowly raise it as high as is comfortable.
  4. Contract your glute at the top and slowly lower your leg back to the floor.
  5. Repeat on the other side.

Prone superman holds

To do this exercise:

  1. Lie on your stomach, with your legs straight and arms extended forward.
  2. Point your toes, engage your glutes, and raise your legs and arms slightly off the floor.
  3. Hold the position for around 1 second, then return to the floor.

Downsides to using ankle weights

The research on ankle weights suggests that you can improve general fitness and walking mechanics by incorporating them into your overall daily routine.

Nevertheless, ankle weights are far from a complete fitness solution.

You’re unlikely to be injured by using ankle weights sparingly. But unless you incorporate weight training and aerobic exercise in your routine, you’re not likely to see any dramatic change in your fitness through ankle weights alone.

Furthermore, if used only when walking, the ankle weights will add more resistance to your quads and hip flexors. This could potentially lead to muscular imbalances if done in excess.

If you tend to have pain in your ankles, knees, or hips, you may want to avoid using ankle weights — or at the very least seek guidance from a healthcare professional.

The extra stress of even small amounts of weight shouldn’t be taken lightly when it comes to your joints. However, this doesn’t mean ankle weights are useless or inherently dangerous.

Simply understand that they’re best utilized for targeted muscular strengthening, in moderate amounts. They’re best used in conjunction with traditional, well-studied fitness methods such as:

  • dumbbells
  • barbells
  • cardiovascular exercise

Rather than wearing weights when walking and performing daily tasks, you may be better served by implementing a few of the exercises above into your fitness routine.

Summary

To avoid overuse injuries, ankle weights should be used sparingly as part of a complete fitness program.

The bottom line

Ankle weights show promise as both a rehabilitation method and a tool for general fitness improvements.

Evidence suggests that ankle weights may improve your walking mechanics and fitness. They’re unlikely to cause injury when used sparingly.

If you want to add ankle weights to your routine, keep the weights light and wear them for only short periods of time.

While ankle weights do have scientific evidence as a training tool, they’re best used as a component of your overall workout program as opposed to a stand-alone solution for improving fitness.

 

How we reviewed this article:

History

Share this article

Evidence Based

This article is based on scientific evidence, written by experts and fact checked by experts.

Our team of licensed nutritionists and dietitians strive to be objective, unbiased, honest and to present both sides of the argument.

This article contains scientific references. The numbers in the parentheses (1, 2, 3) are clickable links to peer-reviewed scientific papers.

Medically reviewed by Jake Tipane, CPTWritten by Tyler Read, BSc, CPT on March 15, 2021

related stories

  • How to Get a Full-Body Workout Using Ankle Weights
  • How to Get Rid of Cankles: 5 Effective Calf Exercises
  • 4 Weighted Vests We Recommend From Cheap to Investment Piece
  • In Our Rebounder Era: We Put This Fitness Trend to the Test
  • Capsule Home Gym: Versatile Gym Equipment for Small Spaces

Read this next

  • How to Get a Full-Body Workout Using Ankle WeightsMedically reviewed by Peggy Pletcher, M.S., R.D., L.D., CDEREAD MORE
  • How to Get Rid of Cankles: 5 Effective Calf ExercisesMedically reviewed by Peggy Pletcher, M.S., R.D., L.D., CDEREAD MORE
  • 4 Weighted Vests We Recommend From Cheap to Investment PieceWritten by Catherine Conelly

    Weighted vests proved to be helpful for increasing workout intensity. Consider us convinced. Here’s what happened when we suited up to try this trend…

    READ MORE
  • In Our Rebounder Era: We Put This Fitness Trend to the Test

    Tired of stale home workouts? We tested a rebounder trampoline to see if it’s an effective way to revive boring routines. Read our review.

    READ MORE
  • Capsule Home Gym: Versatile Gym Equipment for Small Spaces

    Capsule home gyms are a great option if you want to exercise more when space and money is tight. Learn about the best equipment to start with here.

    READ MORE
  • Elliptical vs. Treadmill: Which Cardio Machine Is Better?Medically reviewed by Daniel Bubnis, M.S., NASM-CPT, NASE Level II-CSS

    Elliptical or treadmill? Both types of machines offer cardio benefits. While there are similarities, there are also differences. Learn about the pros…

    READ MORE
  • Pexmor Punching Bag: Apartment DemoMedically reviewed by the Healthline Medical Network

    Healthline demonstrates how to use the Little Birdie Pexmor Punching bag in a living space.

    READ MORE
  • Peloton Bike Review: Still Worth It?

    At this stage in the home-indoor-cycling game, what is best all around in terms of cost efficiency and engagement?

    READ MORE
  • Healthline Reviews: FLYBIRD Adjustable BenchMedically reviewed by the Healthline Medical Network

    This adjustable bench from FLYBIRD has a high load capacity, a comfortable pad, 7 back positions, and 3 seat positions — all at an affordable price.

    READ MORE
  • Lululemon’s Cross Training Shoe Is Here — And It’s Pretty Great

    We gave the new fitness footwear from Lululemon a run to see how well it holds up.

    READ MORE

Tag » What Muscles Do Ankle Weights Work