These poses may get you a new PR.
(Photo: Calin Van Paris/Canva)
Updated September 11, 2025 02:52PM
I didn’t fully appreciate the impact of practicing yoga on those who do resistance training until I encouraged my husband, an avid powerlifter, to try including it in his morning workout routine.
At first, he was hesitant. Although he’s occasionally joined me for a class when we travelled or served as my practice student when I was creating a new class, he’s always preferred a barbell to a yoga mat. It’s like how I sometimes grumble about strength training, even though I know it’s good for me. That’s how I came to realize that many of us tend to shy away from the type of movement our bodies need most.
Mobility work is key for anyone who lifts, whether you’re a bodybuilder or the occasional gym-goer. Mobility is more than just being bendy—it’s also having the strength and stability to use your range of motion functionally, which is critical for exercises such as squats and deadlifts. In exercise, mobility is the active ability to move a joint through its full range of motion with control.
Benefits of Yoga for Mobility
Earlier this year, when my husband’s limited ankle and hip mobility started holding back his squat depth, I showed him a few simple yoga for mobility moves he could do in under 10 minutes. To his surprise, it worked.
Within a few weeks of practicing daily, his squat depth improved, his nagging hip pain faded, and he broke through plateaus that had been frustrating him for months.
Improving your mobility can pay off in even more ways.
Prevents Injuries
Practicing yoga for mobility allows you to move more fluidly under load and avoid muscle compensations that can affect form.
Maximizes Performance
Greater ankle and hip mobility allows you to squat below parallel (i.e., your hip crease goes lower than the top of your knees), which maximizes glute and quadriceps engagement. Similarly, less-tense hamstrings can better support a proper deadlift hip hinge.
Also, upper spine (thoracic) mobility creates a stronger bench press arch, which can enhance shoulder stability and chest muscle activation.
Improves Balance and Coordination
Practicing yoga for mobility wakes up the smaller stabilizer muscles that gym-goers often overlook. This helps reduce awkward missteps under load.
Combine that and all of the above with yoga’s ability to boost circulation and bust stress and you’ve got a recipe for enhanced recovery and fewer injuries. In a fitness culture that often encourages people to identify with one style of training, it’s worth remembering that a balanced approach pays off.
5 Yoga for Mobility Poses for Weight Lifters
Below are yoga for mobility poses lifters can add to their routine to increase range of motion, prevent injuries, and hit new PRs—no hour-long class required. You can string these poses together for a sequence that you repeat two or three times before or after your workout or you can add specific ones to your routine. Focus on moving with your breath and being aware of where you’re tensing and releasing in each posture.
1. Squat
One of the biggest challenges lifters face is hitting depth in a squat, which requires ample dorsiflexion of the ankle and open hips. Squat (Malasana) is one of the most effective postures for stretching the Achilles tendons, calves, and inner thighs while also activating and opening the hips.
How to: Step your feet slightly wider than hip-width distance apart with your toes angled out. Inhale as you lift through the waist. Exhale as you bend your knees, sinking your hips as low as is comfortable while tracking your knees over your toes. Keep your chest lifted and spine long as you gaze forward.
You have the option to press your palms together in front of your chest and use your elbows to gently assist your knees open. If you’re struggling to keep your heels down on the mat, slide a blanket, folded towel, even a weight plate underneath them.
2. Cobra
Mobility in the thoracic spine and chest is crucial for lifts that require you to retract your shoulder blades, such as a bench press or low-bar back squat. Cobra Pose (Ardha Bhujangasana) strengthens spinal extensors while opening the chest in a safe, supported way.
How to: Lie on your stomach with your palms underneath your shoulders. As you inhale, press your feet into the mat, draw your navel toward the spine, and lift your chest off the mat while drawing your shoulders back. Gaze forward. You should feel as if you’re pulling your chest forward between your palms. Exhale as you lower your forehead to the mat. Repeat once or twice.
3. Extended Puppy Pose
Extended Puppy Pose (Uttana Shishosana) targets tight shoulders and opens the upper spine, which makes it an excellent stretch for anyone looking to improve their overhead press.
How to: Come to hands and knees with your shoulders stacked over your wrists and hips stacked over your knees. Inhale as you walk your palms forward while keeping your hips above your knees. Your arms will be extended with your palms facing down. Exhale as you lower your chest and forehead toward the mat, breathing into the stretch and drawing your shoulder blades back. Wrap your triceps down away from your chest and toward the mat to externally rotate your shoulders.
For a deeper tricep stretch, place your elbows on blocks and bring your palms together overhead, drawing them toward the back of your head.
4. Downward-Facing Dog
Tight hamstrings can compromise deadlift form, forcing the lower back to work harder than it should and risking strain. Downward-Facing Dog (Adho Mukha Svanasana) helps release the hamstrings and calves while building shoulder stability.
How to: From hands and knees, inhale as you press your palms into the mat and lift your hips up and back. You can pedal your feet by bending one knee at a time or keep both knees bent to release tension on your hamstrings and prioritize stretching the lower back. Stay here for several breaths, sending the tailbone high, gazing toward the navel, and pressing your heels gently toward the mat. It’s okay if they don’t touch it.
5. Low Lunge
Tight hip flexors are a common gripe among weight lifters as well as those who spend a good portion of their day sitting. Having open hip flexors can be helpful for moving through your full range of motion in lifts such as Bulgarian split squats and hip thrusts. Most of all, hip flexor stretches can help improve your overall form, reducing issues including lower back and knee pain.
Low Lunge (Anjaneyasana) can do all of that while also helping improve your posture.
How to: From Downward-Facing Dog, exhale as you step your right foot forward and lower your left knee to the mat. Inhale your arms overhead, keeping your shoulders relaxed as you gaze forward or up toward your thumbs. Square your hips to the wall in front of you.
To intensify the stretch, let your hips sink a little lower toward the mat. Feel free to place your hands on two blocks, one on either side of your hips, for support or keep your hands on your front thigh. Stay for several breaths before repeating on the left side.