4 Exercises To Fix Duck Feet By Improving Hip Internal Rotation

If your feet are turned out excessively, you may have “duck feet” (aka “penguin-toed” and “toeing out”), which is a postural issue where your feet point out to your sides instead of straight ahead.

Depending on your body’s structure, this may be a normal position for you and it may not be an issue at all. Or, it could be a postural dysfunction caused by problems at the hips, knees, or ankles. If that’s the case, I’ve found that the hips are the usual culprit.

So, here are some exercises for improving hip internal rotation to help fix duck feet.

Fix Your Duck Feet by Improving Hip Internal Rotation (Q+A)

Here are four exercises that will help you restore the internal rotation at your hips (from easiest to hardest):

1) Standing, single-leg, straight leg internal rotation – Raise one leg, locking the knee and pulling the toes back. Maintaining the knee lock and ankle flexion, rotate internally at the hip (i.e. towards your centerline) trying to point the toes of your raised leg toward your planted foot. Repeat for reps.

2) Standing single-leg, bent-leg internal rotation (the “hurdler swoop”) – Standing on one leg, swoop the opposite leg up and around in a circle as if raising it over an invisible hurdle that’s placed off to your side. As you swoop the leg forward, begin to internally rotate at the hip as you reach your foot toward the ground, placing it down on the ball of foot first, then pressing the heel down as you “corkscrew” your hip internally. Reverse the process and repeat for reps.

3) Hip internal rotation from tall lunge position – From a tall lunge position with rear knee off the ground, and as close to locked as is comfortable, twist your rear leg internally – reaching your outside ankle toward the ground – while keeping your front leg braced. Repeat for reps.

4) Hip internal rotation from low lunge position with front knee blocked and opposite arm down – From a low lunge position, block the outside of your front knee with your hand or elbow so that it won’t move as you internally rotate your rear leg with knee locked. Opposite arm should be placed on the ground for support and balance. Repeat for reps.

Tips

  • Be mindful of your posture and foot position as you go about your day and whenever training – trying to keep your feet pointed straight (or in their natural position) as often as possible.
  • Don’t move into pain – a little discomfort is okay, but stay away from pain
  • Practice these exercises often to see if they produce positive results – do 5-10+ reps per exercise, per leg, at least once a day and up to several times per day.

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5 Simple Exercises to Reverse the Damage from Sitting in Only 5 Minutes a Day

The Cossack Squat & Shin Roll Exercises For The Ankles and Knees

The Shinbox Switch Exercise For The Hips and Lower Back

TLC Exercises for Building Strong and Mobile Ankles and Feet

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4 thoughts on “4 Exercises To Fix Duck Feet By Improving Hip Internal Rotation”

  1. Both my feet evert, one more then the other. This is causing issues with my walking pattern and it’s hurting my feet. I’ve noticed that they stay the exackly same way as when in driving

    How to know if my feet point to the sides by posture issue or that’s their normal position?

    I would like very much to fix this

  2. This article is simplifying things greatly and should not be posted as a guideline for anybody. There are so many more causes for feet pointing out starting from the acetabulum position inside of pelvis, femur (thigh bone) head pointing back instead of being normal, tibia (shin bone) being externally rotated, compensatory hyper pronation of the ankle/foot just to name few. Correcting these indifferences by just turning feet in or releasing muscles/fascias is creating tons of other problems. Just look at the best runners in the world. Many of them don’t point their feet straight forward since they have discrepancies in their structure.

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