Single-Leg Balance With Head Rotation progresses static single-leg stance by adding horizontal head turns. Direct evidence for this exact MAT test is limited, but related vestibular screening research uses standing balance tasks with yaw head rotations to increase sensory and vestibular challenge.
Head rotation increases the challenge of single-leg balance because the client must maintain postural control while the head and visual/vestibular systems are moving.
Test name: Single-Leg Balance With Head Rotation
Category: Static balance with vestibular/sensory challenge
Primary score: Time held or errors
Best use: Balance progression and sensory challenge
Key limitation: Exact-test norms are limited.
The client stands on one leg while turning the head side to side at a controlled speed.
Used to challenge postural control, vestibular contribution, single-leg stability and balance under head movement.
It may reflect lower-limb balance, sensory integration, vestibular tolerance, head-movement control and postural stability.
Useful for athletes, active adults and clients who can safely complete standard single-leg balance. Use caution with dizziness or vestibular symptoms.
Flat surface
Stopwatch or Measurz stopwatch
Optional Measurz metronome to standardise head-turn rhythm
Optional Measurz rep counter to count head turns
Safety support nearby
Measurz/MAT platform for time, side, head-turn speed, symptoms and retest comparison
Client stands on one leg.
Hands and foot position are standardised.
Start timing once stable.
Client rotates the head left and right at a controlled rhythm.
Stop when the foot touches down, stance foot moves, support is used, dizziness occurs or the time cap is reached.
Repeat both sides.
Record time, side, head-turn rhythm, number of head turns, symptoms, dizziness and reason for stopping.
Formal exact-test norms are limited.
Practical field guidance only:
30 seconds with controlled head turns: strong profile
15–29 seconds: moderate
Under 15 seconds: developing or worth monitoring
Any dizziness should be recorded and interpreted cautiously.
Exact-test reliability is limited. Related vestibular screening protocols use standing balance conditions with yaw head rotations, supporting the concept that head rotation increases sensory challenge, but this should be labelled as related evidence.
Common errors include turning too fast, inconsistent rhythm, not recording dizziness, unsafe setup and comparing head-rotation results with static single-leg stance.
Useful for balance progression, sport-specific postural control, vestibular challenge and return-to-training monitoring.
Record side, time, head-turn rhythm, number of turns, symptoms, dizziness, compensations and retest date. Use the Measurz metronome to standardise rhythm.
What does head rotation add? It increases vestibular and sensory challenge.
Are norms available? Exact norms are limited.
Should dizziness stop the test? Yes.
Can it diagnose vestibular dysfunction? No.
Adds head movement to single-leg balance.
Exact norms are limited.
Standardise head-turn rhythm.
Record dizziness and symptoms.
Measurz can track time, side and rhythm.
Cohen, H. S., et al. (2014). Standing balance tests for screening people with vestibular impairments. The Laryngoscope.