The Wall Sit Single-Leg Test is a unilateral lower-limb strength endurance assessment where the client holds a single-leg wall sit position for as long as possible. The existing Measurz article describes it as a test focused on quadriceps and anterior thigh endurance strength, with the result recorded as hold time on each side and compared side to side.
Recent peer-reviewed research on the single-leg wall squat suggests the test may provide useful information about integrated lower-limb endurance and functional capacity, although the evidence base is still developing and results should be interpreted with protocol, population and testing context in mind.
The Wall Sit Single-Leg Test is a simple but demanding assessment of unilateral lower-limb endurance. Unlike the double-leg wall sit, the single-leg version places greater demand on one limb at a time, making it useful for comparing sides and identifying meaningful endurance differences.
The test primarily challenges the quadriceps and anterior thigh, but it also involves the gluteal muscles, hip stabilisers, trunk control and balance confidence. Because it is performed in a supported wall position, it can be easier to standardise than some dynamic single-leg tests, while still placing a strong endurance demand on the tested limb.
The result should not be used to diagnose a condition or make a standalone decision. It is best interpreted alongside strength testing, range of motion, balance, symptoms, sport demands, activity goals and related lower-limb assessments.
Test name: Wall Sit Single-Leg Test
Alternative name: Single-Leg Wall Squat Test
Category: Lower-limb strength endurance / unilateral endurance
Primary score: Time held in seconds
Main muscles challenged: Quadriceps, gluteals, hip stabilisers and trunk stabilisers
Key comparison: Left versus right side, dominant versus non-dominant side, baseline versus retest
Best suited to: Sport, fitness, lower-limb endurance monitoring and side-to-side comparison
Key limitation: Published norms are limited, and results are influenced by knee angle, hip angle, foot position, body mass, balance confidence, motivation and stopping criteria.
The Wall Sit Single-Leg Test requires the client to hold a single-leg wall sit position for as long as possible. The client positions their back against a wall, lowers into a set hip and knee angle, lifts one foot off the floor, and maintains the position until task failure.
The current Measurz article describes the standard version as being performed at either 90 degrees of hip and knee flexion, which is more challenging, or 45 degrees, which is less challenging. It also recommends using an inclinometer on the front of the thigh to help standardise position.
A 2025 study published in the International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy described the single-leg wall squat as a functional test with potential value for assessing lower-extremity muscular endurance. In that study, healthy university students performed the test to volitional failure, and performance appeared to reflect more than isolated hip or knee strength alone.
The Wall Sit Single-Leg Test may be used to assess:
Unilateral lower-limb strength endurance
Quadriceps and anterior thigh endurance
Hip and gluteal endurance contribution
Side-to-side endurance differences
Dominant versus non-dominant limb comparison
Baseline and retest change
Lower-limb fatigue response
Progress after endurance or strength training blocks
Integrated lower-limb capacity in a simple field setting
It is especially useful when the professional wants a practical single-leg endurance measure that is easy to repeat and compare over time.
The primary score is:
Time held in seconds
The result may reflect:
Quadriceps endurance
Gluteus maximus and gluteus medius contribution
Hip and knee control
Trunk and pelvic stability
Body mass influence
Balance confidence
Pain or symptom response
Motivation and effort tolerance
Familiarisation with the test position
The test does not directly measure maximal strength, isolated quadriceps force, jump performance, running capacity, return-to-sport readiness or injury status. It provides one useful piece of assessment information within a broader lower-limb profile.
The Wall Sit Single-Leg Test may be useful for:
Field and court sport clients
Runners
Jumping and landing athletes
Gym and strength-training clients
General fitness clients
Clients completing lower-limb endurance monitoring
Professionals wanting side-to-side comparison
Professionals tracking progress over time
It may not be appropriate for clients who cannot safely tolerate single-leg loading, sustained knee flexion or the required wall sit position.
Smooth wall
Non-slip floor
Stopwatch or Measurz stopwatch
Optional inclinometer to standardise hip, knee or thigh angle
Optional AR measurement in Measurz to document setup, foot distance or position
Optional floor markers to standardise foot placement
Optional mat or visual marker for consistency
Optional MAT isometric measurement tools, such as Anker, Gripper or Muscle Meter, for related lower-limb strength testing
Measurz platform for recording hold time, side, position, symptoms, compensations and retest comparison
For this test, the most important equipment is a consistent wall setup and accurate timing. The Measurz stopwatch can be used to record hold duration, while the inclinometer can help standardise thigh angle. AR measurement can help document foot distance from the wall or setup position when consistency is important.
For broader lower-limb profiling, MAT products can be used alongside this test. For example, Anker, Gripper or Muscle Meter can support related isometric strength measurements, while Measurz can store this test with more than 1300 assessments, including orthopaedic tests, ROM tests, outcome measures, strength tests, endurance tests and the assessment content being built in these articles.
Before testing:
Explain the purpose and effort required.
Confirm which side will be tested first.
Record dominant side if relevant.
Check whether the client is comfortable with single-leg loading.
Standardise footwear.
Avoid testing immediately after fatiguing lower-limb exercise.
Use the same setup for retesting.
The client stands with their back, shoulders and head against the wall.
Feet are placed in the standardised position.
The client slides down the wall to the target hip and knee angle.
A 90-degree hip and knee position is more demanding, while a 45-degree version may be used as a modified option.
Hands are placed on the hips or crossed over the chest, but the same arm position should be used on retest.
The non-tested foot is lifted off the floor.
The timer starts once the correct single-leg position is achieved.
Instruct the client to hold the position for as long as possible.
Start the stopwatch once the client reaches the correct position.
Stop timing when the client loses position, places the opposite foot down, uses the hands for support, reports intolerable symptoms, or chooses to stop.
Record the hold time in seconds.
Allow adequate rest before testing the other side.
Repeat the same protocol on the opposite limb.
Record symptoms, pain, compensations and reason for stopping.
For meaningful comparison, repeat the same:
Wall and floor surface
Foot position
Knee and hip angle
Arm position
Side order
Footwear
Warm-up
Rest period
Timing method
Stopping criteria
The primary score is:
Single-leg wall sit hold time in seconds
Record each side separately:
Left side time
Right side time
Dominant side time
Non-dominant side time
Absolute side-to-side difference
Percentage side-to-side difference
Symptoms or reason for stopping
A longer hold generally suggests better unilateral lower-limb isometric endurance. However, interpretation should consider the full testing context.
Important factors include:
Knee angle
Hip angle
Foot position
Body mass
Pain or symptoms
Balance confidence
Motivation
Familiarisation
Limb dominance
Whether the opposite foot touched the floor
Whether the client maintained the target position
The original Measurz article reports that some research on high school participants suggests average values of approximately 50–75 seconds for males and 35–45 seconds for females at 90 degrees of hip and knee flexion. These values are useful as practical context, but they should not be treated as universal norms for all age groups, sports or populations.
Topend Sports also provides practical single-leg wall sit ratings, suggesting that adult males holding around 75–100 seconds may be considered “good” and over 100 seconds “excellent”, while adult females holding around 45–60 seconds may be considered “good” and over 60 seconds “excellent”. These values are practical field standards rather than peer-reviewed universal cut-offs.
Use these as broad field-use bands only:
Males
Excellent: over 100 seconds
Good: 75–100 seconds
Moderate: 50–74 seconds
Developing: 25–49 seconds
Low current endurance profile: under 25 seconds
Females
Excellent: over 60 seconds
Good: 45–60 seconds
Moderate: 30–44 seconds
Developing: 15–29 seconds
Low current endurance profile: under 15 seconds
These ranges should be interpreted cautiously and adjusted for age, sport, training history, symptoms, body mass and protocol.
A 2025 observational cohort study in healthy university students found average single-leg wall squat performance of 76.2 ± 35.2 repetitions in a repetition-based protocol. The study also found that performance was not strongly correlated with isolated handheld dynamometry measures of hip and knee strength, suggesting the test captures a more integrated endurance task rather than isolated strength alone.
Because that study used a repetition-based version rather than a pure timed hold, it should be used as related evidence rather than a direct time-based norm.
For most practical settings, the strongest interpretation comes from:
Baseline versus retest comparison
Left versus right comparison
Dominant versus non-dominant comparison
Client goals
Sport or activity demands
Symptoms and pain response
Movement quality
Related lower-limb strength, ROM and balance tests
Internal Measurz benchmarks across similar clients or groups
The evidence base for the exact timed Single-Leg Wall Sit Test is still limited. However, recent peer-reviewed work supports the single-leg wall squat as a promising functional endurance assessment.
The 2025 university-student study concluded that the single-leg wall squat demonstrated potential as a functional lower-limb endurance test, but also noted that further research is needed to better understand validity, sensitivity to change and generalisability across broader populations.
The same study reported that performance had low to mostly non-significant correlations with isolated handheld dynamometry strength measures. This suggests the test may reflect an integrated combination of endurance, postural control, neuromuscular coordination and single-leg stability rather than isolated quadriceps or hip strength alone.
To improve reliability:
Use the same hip and knee angle.
Use an inclinometer if available.
Standardise foot placement.
Use the same wall and surface.
Use the same arm position.
Test sides in the same order.
Use the same stopping criteria.
Record pain and symptoms.
Allow consistent rest between sides.
Avoid testing after fatiguing lower-limb training.
Common errors include:
Changing the knee angle between tests
Changing foot distance from the wall
Allowing the opposite foot to touch the floor
Sliding up or down during the test
Using hands for support
Comparing 45-degree and 90-degree versions directly
Not recording side dominance
Not recording pain, symptoms or reason for stopping
Inconsistent rest between sides
Assuming the result reflects isolated quadriceps strength only
The test is useful, but it should not be overinterpreted. A low score may suggest reduced unilateral endurance or tolerance in that position, but it does not identify the cause on its own.
The Wall Sit Single-Leg Test can help professionals:
Monitor unilateral lower-limb endurance
Compare left and right sides
Track progress over time
Identify meaningful side-to-side differences
Support lower-limb performance profiling
Combine endurance findings with isometric strength testing
Compare results with single-leg squat, step-down, balance or hop testing
Educate clients using a simple and repeatable performance measure
For athletes, the test may provide practical context for sports requiring repeated single-leg loading, running, cutting, landing, deceleration and sustained lower-limb control.
In Measurz, record:
Test name: Wall Sit Single-Leg Test
Side tested
Dominance
Hold time
Units: seconds
Knee angle
Hip angle
Foot distance from wall
Arm position
Footwear
Surface
Pain score
Symptoms
Reason for stopping
Compensations
Rest period between sides
Retest date
Related lower-limb strength, ROM, balance and endurance results
The Measurz stopwatch can support accurate timing. The inclinometer can help standardise hip, knee or thigh angle. AR measurement can help document setup distance and position. If the professional wants to add objective strength context, MAT isometric measurement tools such as Anker, Gripper or Muscle Meter can be used for related lower-limb strength testing.
This test can be stored within a broader Measurz profile that includes orthopaedic tests, ROM, outcome measures, balance tests, strength tests, endurance tests and the growing MAT assessment library.
Wall Sit Test
5-Time Sit-to-Stand Test
30-Second Sit-to-Stand Test
Single-Leg Squat Test
Step-Down Test
Single-Leg Balance
Hop Tests
Isometric Knee Extension
Calf Raise Endurance Test
Countermovement Jump
It measures how long a client can maintain a single-leg wall sit position and provides practical information about unilateral lower-limb endurance.
The quadriceps are strongly challenged, but the test also involves the gluteal muscles, hip stabilisers, trunk control and balance confidence.
As a broad guide, adult males holding 75–100 seconds may be considered good, and over 100 seconds excellent. Adult females holding 45–60 seconds may be considered good, and over 60 seconds excellent. These are practical field benchmarks, not universal norms.
The 90-degree version is more challenging and is commonly used for stronger clients. A 45-degree version may be used as a modified option. The chosen angle must be recorded and repeated consistently.
Yes, when appropriate. The single-leg version is especially useful for comparing left and right sides.
No. It can identify endurance differences or reduced tolerance in the test position, but it does not diagnose a condition or identify the cause on its own.
Retesting every 4–8 weeks may be practical, depending on the program, client goals and training load.
The Wall Sit Single-Leg Test is a practical unilateral lower-limb endurance assessment.
The primary score is hold time in seconds.
Side-to-side comparison is often more useful than general benchmarks.
Setup must be standardised, especially hip angle, knee angle, foot position and stopping criteria.
Current evidence suggests the single-leg wall squat reflects integrated lower-limb endurance and control, not isolated strength alone.
Measurz can help track time, side, position, symptoms, compensations and progress over time.
Lehecka, B., Black, J., Jindra, J., McCloud, C., & Pummell, C. (2025). The single-leg wall squat test: An assessment of functional lower extremity endurance in university students. International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy, 20(8), 1198–1202. https://ijspt.scholasticahq.com/article/142063-the-single-leg-wall-squat-test-an-assessment-of-functional-lower-extremity-endurance-in-university-students
BrianMac Sports Coach. (n.d.). Wall squat test. https://www.brianmac.co.uk/wallsquat.htm
Topend Sports. (n.d.). Single-leg wall sit test calculator. https://www.topendsports.com/testing/tests/wall-sit.htm
NRPT. (n.d.). Wall squat test for leg strength. https://nrpt.co.uk/training/tests/strength/wall.htm
BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine. (2025). Lower extremity functional performance tests and their measurement properties: A systematic review. BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine, 11(2), e002389. https://bmjopensem.bmj.com/content/11/2/e002389