How to exercise with bad knees
Most people with 'bad knees' are told to avoid exercise, which is the worst possible advice. The research is clear: the right kind of exercise strengthens the muscles around the knee, improves joint stability, reduces pain, and slows the progression of osteoarthritis. The wrong kind of exercise (running on pavement, deep squats with bad form, jumping) can absolutely make knees worse. So the goal isn't to stop moving. It's to choose movements that build strength and mobility without beating up the joint. This is more achievable than most people think. Many people with chronic knee pain end up with stronger, more functional knees after a year of the right programming than they had before the pain started. If your knees are acutely injured or you're recovering from surgery, this isn't for you — see a physical therapist. But for the millions of people with chronic achiness, mild arthritis, old injuries that healed imperfectly, or 'bad knees' that aren't actually diagnosed as anything specific, this is the plan.
Get a real diagnosis first
'Bad knees' is not a diagnosis. It's a complaint. There are very different problems that get called 'bad knees' — patellar tendinitis, meniscus tears, osteoarthritis, ACL deficiency, IT band syndrome, runner's knee, bursitis, ligament sprains. Each has different implications for exercise.
Before designing a plan, see an orthopedist or physical therapist. Get imaging if they recommend it. Have them tell you specifically what's wrong. Then ask them — point blank — what you should and shouldn't do.
A good PT will give you a list of approved exercises and a list of things to avoid. A great PT will give you a progressive program to build back to full function. Most knee problems improve significantly with the right strengthening program, and you don't have to guess at it — let an expert evaluate you.
If your knees are just generally achy after a lot of activity, with no specific diagnosis, you can likely start with the modifications below and see how they feel. But persistent pain deserves a real workup.
Choose low-impact cardio
High-impact cardio — running, jumping rope, plyometrics, basketball — loads the knee joint with 3-5x bodyweight with each step. Low-impact cardio loads it with 1-1.5x bodyweight. The difference adds up over thousands of reps.
Best low-impact cardio options:
- Swimming — zero joint impact, full-body workout
- Cycling (stationary or outdoor) — knee-friendly, builds quad strength
- Elliptical — low-impact, decent calorie burn
- Rowing — primarily upper body, but legs contribute without impact
- Walking — slowest, but genuinely joint-friendly
For most people with bad knees, swimming and cycling are the two best options. They both build cardiovascular fitness and leg strength without the pounding.
If you really love running, you might be able to keep doing it — but expect to do it less often, swap some runs for cycling, and supplement with the strength work below. Many recreational runners with knee issues switch to a 70/30 cycling-to-running ratio and report much better knees.
Strengthen the muscles around the knee
The knee is a hinge joint — it relies entirely on the muscles around it (quads, hamstrings, glutes, calves) for stability. Strong surrounding muscles literally take load off the joint. This is why strength training is the most evidence-supported treatment for chronic knee pain.
Best exercises for knee-friendly strength:
- Leg press (light to moderate weight, controlled range)
- Leg extensions (controversial historically, but recent research shows they're safe)
- Hamstring curls
- Glute bridges / hip thrusts
- Wall sits
- Step-ups (low step, slow tempo)
- Bodyweight squats (shallow range to start)
The key is controlled movement, moderate loads (not maxing out), and pain-free range of motion. If an exercise hurts in a sharp, joint-specific way, modify or skip it. If it just feels like muscle work, you're fine.
Two to three strength sessions per week, focusing on legs, will produce measurable improvement in knee function within 8-12 weeks.
Avoid these specific movements
Some exercises are notorious for aggravating knee problems. They're not 'bad' for everyone, but if you have bad knees, they're high-risk:
- Deep squats with heavy load (ass-to-grass squats under 1.5x bodyweight)
- Plyometrics (box jumps, jump squats, depth jumps)
- Lunges with deep knee travel
- Full-extension leg extensions with heavy weight
- High-impact sports (basketball, tennis, running on hard surfaces)
- Any movement that causes sharp or grinding pain
This isn't forever. As your knees get stronger and pain decreases, you might be able to reintroduce some of these. But the first 3-6 months of working with bad knees is about choosing safer movements and building back to capacity.
Add mobility work to maintain range of motion
Knee stiffness often comes from the joint capsule losing flexibility, the surrounding muscles getting tight, or both. Gentle mobility work keeps the joint moving through its full range and prevents the kind of stiffness that makes every movement worse.
Easy knee mobility drills:
- Heel slides (lying on your back, slowly bending the knee)
- Calf stretches (tight calves pull on the knee)
- Hamstring stretches (tight hamstrings limit knee extension)
- Quad stretches (kneeling hip flexor stretch)
- Foam rolling the quads and IT band (gentle, not painful)
Do 5-10 minutes of mobility work daily, especially before and after workouts. It doesn't need to be elaborate. The point is just to keep things moving.
If you've lost significant range of motion (can't fully straighten or fully bend your knee), a physical therapist can give you specific mobility drills to recover it. Don't try to force range back on your own.
Build the habit and trust the timeline
Knee improvements don't happen in a week. They happen over months of consistent strengthening, smart exercise selection, and gradual progression. Most people quit too early because they expected to feel better in a few weeks.
A realistic timeline:
- 2-4 weeks: less acute pain during daily activities
- 6-8 weeks: noticeable improvement in knee function
- 12 weeks: meaningful strength gains in supporting muscles
- 6 months: most people report their knees feel better than before they started
Stick with it. The first few weeks can feel like you're not making progress. You are — it's just internal. Keep training, keep smart, keep consistent. The knees respond.
Citations & External Resources
This guide was researched using authoritative sources. For further reading, explore the references below:
Frequently Asked Questions
How to exercise with bad knees?
Bad knees don't mean no exercise. They mean choosing movements that build strength without pounding the joints. For more practical tips, check out our guide on How to get into shape for summer fast.
What is the best way to exercise with bad knees?
The best way to exercise with bad knees is to follow a systematic step-by-step approach. Most people with 'bad knees' are told to avoid exercise, which is the worst possible advice. The research is clear: the right kind of exercise strengthens the muscles around the knee, improves joint... You might also find our guide on How to get into shape for summer fast helpful.
How long does it take to exercise with bad knees?
Most people can exercise with bad knees within 7 minutes of consistent practice. The exact timeline depends on your starting point and how diligently you follow the steps in this guide. For more help, read our related guide: How to get into shape for summer fast.