The Wall Sit Test is a simple lower-limb strength endurance assessment where the client holds a seated position against a wall for as long as possible. It is commonly used to monitor quadriceps endurance, lower-limb isometric tolerance and progress over time. Field-testing guidance commonly describes the wall squat or wall sit as a test used to monitor quadriceps strength endurance.
The Wall Sit Test is a practical, low-equipment assessment for lower-limb strength endurance. It is quick to set up, easy to explain and simple to repeat, which makes it useful in fitness, sport, exercise and performance monitoring environments.
The test primarily challenges the quadriceps, with support from the gluteal muscles, hamstrings and trunk stabilisers. It can help provide a baseline for lower-limb endurance, but it should not be interpreted as a complete measure of knee, hip or lower-limb function.
Test name: Wall Sit Test
Category: Strength endurance / lower-limb endurance
Primary score: Time held in seconds
Equipment: Wall, stopwatch, non-slip floor, Measurz recording
Main muscles challenged: Quadriceps, gluteals, hamstrings and trunk stabilisers
Best suited to: General fitness, sport and lower-limb endurance monitoring
Key limitation: Published universal norms are limited, and results are influenced by knee angle, foot position, motivation and body mass.
The Wall Sit Test requires the client to hold a seated position with their back against a wall, hips and knees flexed to approximately 90 degrees and feet flat on the floor. The timer starts once the correct position is achieved and stops when the client can no longer maintain the required position.
The wall sit is often described as a quadriceps endurance or wall squat endurance test. It is most useful when setup and scoring are consistent across baseline and retest sessions.
The Wall Sit Test may be used to assess:
Lower-limb strength endurance
Quadriceps endurance
Isometric tolerance
Lower-limb fatigue response
Progress after a strengthening block
Side-to-side comparison when a single-leg version is used
General lower-limb capacity in a simple field setting
The primary score is:
Time held in seconds
The result may reflect:
Quadriceps endurance
Gluteal contribution
Lower-limb isometric tolerance
Body mass influence
Pain or symptom response
Motivation and effort tolerance
Familiarisation with the test position
It does not directly measure maximal strength, power, joint range of motion, movement quality or readiness for sport.
The Wall Sit Test may be useful for:
General fitness clients
Field and court sport clients
Runners and recreational athletes
Clients completing lower-limb endurance monitoring
Strength and conditioning professionals
Exercise professionals tracking progress over time
It may not be appropriate for clients who cannot comfortably tolerate the wall sit position or who experience symptoms during sustained knee flexion.
Smooth wall
Non-slip floor
Stopwatch or timer
Optional goniometer or inclinometer to help standardise knee angle
Optional floor markers to standardise foot position
Optional Measurz stopwatch for timing
Optional Measurz notes field to record pain, symptoms, compensations and stopping reason
MAT/Measurz platform for recording, comparing and retesting results
In Measurz, professionals can record the wall sit as part of a broader lower-limb testing profile. Measurz includes 1300+ tests, including orthopaedic tests, ROM tests, outcome measures, strength tests, endurance tests and the growing assessment library being built through these articles.
The client stands with their back against a wall.
Feet are placed approximately shoulder-width apart.
The client slides down until the hips and knees are close to 90 degrees.
Thighs should be approximately parallel to the floor.
The back remains in contact with the wall.
Arms can be crossed over the chest or held relaxed, but the same arm position should be used for retesting.
Start the timer once the client reaches the required position.
Instruct the client to hold the position for as long as possible.
Stop the timer when the client loses position, stands up, drops lower, uses their hands for assistance or chooses to stop.
Record the time in seconds.
Record pain, symptoms, shaking, knee position and reason for stopping.
A single-leg wall sit can be used for side-to-side comparison, but it is more demanding and should only be used when appropriate. Single-leg versions should be recorded separately and not compared directly with double-leg results.
The primary score is:
Wall sit hold time in seconds
A longer hold generally indicates greater lower-limb isometric endurance, but interpretation should consider:
Knee angle
Foot position
Arm position
Body mass
Motivation
Pain or symptoms
Familiarisation
Whether the client maintained true 90-degree positioning
Published universal normative data for the standard double-leg Wall Sit Test are limited. Practical field-based benchmarks can be useful, but they should be interpreted cautiously.
Use the following as general field guidance only:
Excellent lower-limb endurance: 120 seconds or more
Good: 90–119 seconds
Moderate: 60–89 seconds
Developing: 30–59 seconds
Low current endurance profile: under 30 seconds
These bands are practical comparison ranges, not formal cut-offs.
Practical single-leg wall sit guidance suggests that adult males holding approximately 75–100 seconds may be considered “good”, and over 100 seconds “excellent”, while adult females holding approximately 45–60 seconds may be considered “good”, and over 60 seconds “excellent”. These are practical field standards rather than universal peer-reviewed norms.
The Wall Sit Test can be repeatable when setup is standardised, but reliability depends heavily on consistent knee angle, foot placement, surface, instructions and stopping criteria. Published peer-reviewed evidence for the exact standard Wall Sit Test is limited compared with more established lower-limb tests such as sit-to-stand measures.
To improve reliability:
Use the same wall and floor surface.
Standardise foot distance from the wall.
Standardise knee angle.
Use the same arm position.
Record footwear.
Use the same stopping criteria.
Provide one familiarisation trial if needed.
Retest under similar fatigue conditions.
Common errors include:
Allowing the hips to rise or drop
Inconsistent knee angle between tests
Feet too close or too far from the wall
Knees collapsing inward
Using hands for support
Comparing double-leg and single-leg versions
Ignoring pain, symptoms or compensations
The Wall Sit Test can help professionals:
Monitor lower-limb endurance
Track training response
Compare baseline and retest performance
Screen for large side-to-side differences using a single-leg variation
Combine endurance data with strength, jump, balance or sit-to-stand results
Educate clients using a simple, visible performance measure
In Measurz, record:
Test name: Wall Sit Test
Version: double-leg or single-leg
Time held
Units: seconds
Knee angle target
Foot position
Arm position
Side tested if single-leg
Pain score
Symptoms
Reason for stopping
Compensations
Footwear
Surface
Retest date
Related lower-limb strength or endurance findings
The Measurz stopwatch can support consistent timing, while the inclinometer can help standardise knee or trunk position where required. The result can be stored alongside other lower-limb tests, ROM measures, orthopaedic tests and outcome measures to create a clearer overall assessment profile.
5-Time Sit-to-Stand Test
30-Second Sit-to-Stand Test
Single-Leg Wall Sit
Single-Leg Squat
Countermovement Jump
Isometric Knee Extension
Calf Raise Endurance Test
It measures how long a client can maintain a wall sit position and provides a practical indication of lower-limb isometric endurance.
The quadriceps are heavily challenged, but the gluteals, hamstrings and trunk stabilisers also contribute.
For a double-leg wall sit, holding 90 seconds or more may suggest good lower-limb endurance, while 120 seconds or more may suggest excellent endurance. These are practical benchmarks, not universal norms.
Yes, the standard version uses approximately 90 degrees of hip and knee flexion. The same angle should be used for retesting.
Yes. Measurz can record time, position, symptoms, compensations and retest comparison.
The Wall Sit Test is a simple lower-limb strength endurance assessment.
The primary score is time held in seconds.
Setup must be standardised for meaningful retesting.
Published universal norms are limited, so baseline and internal comparison are important.
Measurz can help track time, setup, symptoms and progress over time.
BrianMac Sports Coach. (n.d.). Wall squat test. BrianMac.
Topend Sports. (n.d.). Single-leg wall sit test calculator. Topend Sports.
McIntosh, G., Wilson, L., Affleck, M., & Hall, H. (n.d.). Trunk and lower extremity muscle endurance: Normative data for adults.