Skip to main content

Dumbbell Romanian deadlift: A beginner’s guide to this powerful strength move

RDLs emphasize your glutes and hamstrings a little more than the regular deadlift.

dumbbell Romanian deadlift or RDL man and woman working out in gym with dumbbell
MDV Edwards / Shutterstock

Try adding the dumbbell Romanian deadlift to your workout routine when you want to build your overall strength and scorch those hamstrings and glutes. All you need is a pair of dumbbells, and you’re good to go. With this move, you can refine your overall stability and recruit multiple muscle groups. You’ll also get better at performing other lifts and athletic activities as a result. Let’s go over how to do the dumbbell Romanian deadlift, the benefits, common mistakes to avoid, and the best variations to try. 

What is a dumbbell Romanian deadlift?

woman doing dumbbell Romanian deadlift RDL in gym looking in mirror
Yakov Oskanov / Shutterstock

The dumbbell Romanian deadlift or RDL is a variation of the traditional deadlift that targets and rehabilitates muscles along your posterior chain, including your legs, glutes, and lower back. It’s an excellent strength training compound exercise that engages your hip joints and promotes hypertrophy of multiple muscle groups. You can perform RDLs with one or two dumbbells, a barbell, one or two kettlebells, or bands. 

Recommended Videos

What’s the difference between a deadlift and a Romanian deadlift?

man deadlift barbell outside using lifting straps wrist strap
RDNE / Pexels

Traditional deadlifts and the Romanian deadlift have similarities, but there are also a few main differences, including:

  • With the traditional deadlift, the barbell rests on the floor, and you bend your knees and hips to grip the bar. You lift it up by extending your hips and knees until you’re in a standing position. With a Romanian deadlift, you begin standing with the dumbbells or the barbell in your hands. You hinge at the hips and push your hips back. With a slight bend in your knees, you lower the dumbbells down along your legs until you feel a sufficient stretch in your hamstrings.
  • With a regular deadlift, there’s more quad engagement because you bend your knees more than with the Romanian deadlift. When performing RDLs, your knees are soft but not fully bent. Rather than bending your knees, you’ll use your hip hinge to power through the RDL.
  • RDLs emphasize your glutes and hamstrings a little more than the deadlift. You’ll still fire up those muscles with the regular deadlift, but you’ll get more glute and hamstring activation with an RDL.
  • The range of motion is greater with the deadlift because you lift the bar up from the ground until you’re fully upright. The RDL, on the other hand, has a shorter range of motion because you bring the bar down only until your hamstrings are fully stretched or just below your knees.

Is the Romanian deadlift better than the regular deadlift?

Man lifting deadlift bar
Alora Griffiths / Pexels

The Romanian deadlift isn’t any better than the traditional deadlift, and vice versa. They’re both effective exercises that generate results if you stay consistent and maintain proper form. Both build strength and endurance in your posterior chain. The deadlift is a full-body strength exercise often used in powerlifting competitions and events, and Romanian deadlifts are an excellent choice for targeting and strengthening your hamstrings and glutes.

What muscles are targeted during the dumbbell Romanian deadlift?

shirtless muscular man muscle in gym
Hamid Tajik / Pexels

RDLs activate your posterior chain muscles running along the back of your body, such as your:

  • Glutes
  • Lower back and erector spinae
  • Hamstrings in the back of your thighs
  • Adductor muscles in your inner thighs
  • Core

Your core muscles help stabilize your torso, and the adductors in your inner thighs help to stabilize your legs.

What are the benefits of the dumbbell Romanian deadlift?

man standing black and white in gym holding dumbbells doing shoulder shrug
Taylor Daugherty / Unsplash

Here are some of the benefits of performing dumbbell Romanian deadlifts:

  • It’s a versatile exercise you can do at home without needing a gym membership. You just need two dumbbells.
  • Enhance your lower body strength.
  • Enhance your overall fitness and muscular endurance.
  • It’s friendlier for your knees.
  • Works your core and muscles in your posterior chain.
  • Master your hip hinge and improve your ability to perform other moves that also utilize glute and hip function, such as squats and kettlebell swings.
  • Incorporate RDL into your push-and-pull workout day.
  • Strengthen your back muscles, which could help reduce back pain.
  • Enhance your overall stability.

How to do the dumbbell Romanian deadlift

illustration of dumbbell romanian deadlift exercise
Lio Putra / Adobe Stock

Here’s how to do the dumbbell Romanian deadlift:

  1. Start in a standing position with your feet about hip-width apart and your toes pointing straight ahead. Hold the dumbbells down in front of your thighs with a closed overhand grip. Your palms should be facing your thighs.
  2. Hinge at your hips, engage your core, and push your hips back.
  3. With a slight bend in your knees, start lowering the dumbbells down along your legs with control. Keep the dumbbells close to your body.
  4. Lower the dumbbells down until you feel a sufficient stretch in your hamstrings on the back of your thighs.
  5. Bring your hips forward and bring the dumbbells back up to return to the starting position.
  6. Repeat until you complete the set.

Common mistakes to avoid

man closeup hand holding dumbbell
Engin Akyurt / Unsplash

Get the most out of RDLs by avoiding these common mistakes:

  • Locking your knees. 
  • Not maintaining good posture.
  • Not taking the dumbbells through the maximum range.
  • Hunching or slouching your back.
  • Focusing more on momentum rather than muscle engagement and control.
  • Holding the dumbbells incorrectly.

Tips for proper form

man does dumbbell romanian deadlift exercise RDL in gym MDV Edwards Adobe
MDV Edwards / Adobe Stock

These tips will help you maintain proper form to maximize your results:

  • Maintain a neutral spine throughout the movement.
  • Squeeze your shoulder blades.
  • Focus on control rather than momentum.
  • Start with a lighter weight and perfect your technique before incorporating progressive overload and using heavier weights.
  • Make sure you’re using your hip hinge movement properly.
  • Plant your feet firmly on the floor with your weight distributed evenly.

Variations

Dumbbell single leg, straight leg Romanian deadlift
Red Bull / Red Bull

The following are the best dumbbell Romanian deadlift variations to level up your fitness:

  • Single-leg Romanian deadlift — You’ll increase your balance and stability with the single-leg Romanian deadlift because you have to perform the move on one leg, which heightens the challenge.
  • B stance Romanian deadlift — The B stance RDL involves a staggered stance where you’re shifting most of your weight to challenge just one leg.
Topics
Steph Green
Steph Green is a content writer specializing in healthcare, wellness, and nutrition. With over ten years of experience, she…
What exercise burns the most calories? Here’s your guide to calorie-torching workouts
Which type of workout torches the most calories per hour?
-man shirtless muscles flexing abs arms

We all prefer different types and intensities of exercise, from swimming and cycling to high-intensity interval training and yoga. Maybe running through a wooded trail or the concrete city streets is your thing, or maybe you prefer pumping serious iron at your local gym or home gym. You might be a yogi who enjoys a range of practices or an avid swimmer gliding through laps. If you’re trying to lose weight or achieve a particular fitness goal, trying certain types of exercise helps you ramp up the calorie burning. Let’s look at how calorie-burning contributes to weight loss and what exercise burns the most calories. 
How does calorie burning contribute to weight loss?

Calories are units of energy you take in from your food and drink. You can track your calories, how many you’re taking in, and how many you’re burning with the help of certain apps and wearables. Counting calories is a popular method based on the CICO or ‘calories in, calories out’ model.

Read more
Here’s why fitness buffs are swapping gyms for TRX suspension trainers
Use gravity and your own bodyweight to optimize your muscle power.
TRX handles

Sometimes, even the most devoted gym lovers end up straying from the gym and trying other ways of getting ripped and optimizing their athletic performance. One of the ways that’s garnering more and more attention in the fitness world is the TRX suspension trainer. While the gym has plenty of interesting machines and equipment to work with, other different and effective fitness tools continue to hit the market. Many of these tools can be used at home or even outdoors, and some are so worthwhile and convenient that people are ditching their local gym. Let’s look at the TRX suspension trainer, how it works, and the benefits.
What is the TRX suspension trainer?

The TRX system, otherwise known as Total Resistance Exercises, is a specialized fitness tool and a form of suspension training. Former U.S. Navy SEAL Randy Hetrick originally designed the TRX equipment based on his own experience and research from the military, pro sports, and academic institutions. When you use the TRX Suspension Trainer, you’re leveraging your body weight and gravity to complete a range of exercises. You can choose from signature products, including heavy-duty straps, foot cradles, padding, and handles.
What is suspension training?

Read more
Does taking magnesium supplements boost muscle mass and power? New study is in
Should you take this essential mineral while strength training?
magnesium supplement pill vitamin mineral on table by bottle

Magnesium is an essential mineral that plays a role in a multitude of bodily processes, from supporting your immune system to maintaining normal muscle and nerve function. According to the NHS, men need at least 300mg of magnesium every day. Could magnesium supplementation also boost your muscle mass and power? Recently, researchers decided to find out. Of course, there’s no quick fix to gain muscle strength without working those muscles with resistance training and pumping iron in a gym. Even so, certain things can give you a boost. Let’s take a look at this interesting new study.  
The study

In a review published in the International Journal of Molecular Science, researchers set out to assess how taking magnesium supplements affected skeletal muscle health, with a focus on neuromuscular diseases and muscle tissue. The goal was to understand how magnesium supplementation affected muscle growth, atrophy, and oxidative stress. Oxidative stress refers to excess levels of free radicals in the body and an imbalance between antioxidants and harmful free radical molecules. 

Read more