The bodyweight squat (or air squat) is the foundational movement pattern for all lower-body exercises. Before you ever consider stepping under a barbell, you must be able to perform a perfect, deep, controlled bodyweight squat. Here is a clear, step-by-step progression guide to take you from a complete beginner to a calisthenic master.

Level 1: The Assisted Squat

If you lack the balance, mobility, or strength to perform a standard squat without falling backward, start here.

  • Grab a sturdy object like a doorframe, a pole, or TRX straps.
  • Lean back slightly and sit down as if into an imaginary chair, using your arms to help support your weight and keep you from falling.
  • Focus on keeping your chest up and pushing your knees out.
  • Goal: 3 sets of 15 controlled reps.

Level 2: The Box Squat (or Chair Squat)

This builds confidence and teaches you to activate your glutes and hamstrings rather than just relying on your knees.

  • Place a sturdy chair or box behind you.
  • Perform a squat until your glutes lightly tap the chair. Do not relax and sit down entirely! Keep the tension.
  • Drive through your heels to return to a standing position.
  • Goal: 3 sets of 20 reps.

Level 3: The Standard Air Squat

You no longer need assistance or a target. This is the gold standard.

  • Stand with feet shoulder-width apart, toes pointed slightly out.
  • Keep your core braced. Extend your arms forward for balance as you descend.
  • Drop your hips below your knees (break parallel) while maintaining a flat, neutral spine.
  • Use the Squat Counter AI to ensure you are hitting the proper depth on every single rep.
  • Goal: 3 sets of 30 flawless reps.

Level 4: The Bulgarian Split Squat

Time to introduce unilateral (single-leg) training. This fixes muscle imbalances and drastically increases the load on one leg without adding external weight.

  • Stand a few feet in front of a bench or chair. Rest the top of your back foot on it.
  • Lower your body until your front thigh is parallel to the ground. Your back knee should hover just above the floor.
  • Push back up powerfully through your front heel.
  • Goal: 3 sets of 15 reps per leg.

Level 5: The Pistol Squat (One-Legged Squat)

The ultimate test of lower body strength, balance, and ankle mobility.

  • Stand on one leg. Extend the other leg straight out in front of you.
  • Slowly sit back and down on your standing leg, keeping the extended leg parallel to the floor.
  • Go as deep as possible (hamstring touching calf) and stand back up without your raised foot touching the floor.
  • Tip: Start by holding onto a doorway for balance, or squat down to a chair first before attempting the full unassisted movement.
  • Goal: 3 sets of 5-8 reps per leg.

Summary

Don't rush the process. Building a bulletproof bodyweight squat ensures that your joints, ligaments, and tendons are resilient enough to handle heavy weights later on. Master your own bodyweight first!

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