I’m a Physical Therapist. This Is Why Stretching Your Tight Hamstrings Might Actually Be Making the Problem Worse
If your hamstrings constantly feel tight, you’re probably doing what most people do—stretching them more. You feel tension in the back of your legs, so you assume the muscle is shortened and needs to be lengthened, right? But if that tightness keeps returning no matter how often you stretch, there’s a good chance you’re treating the symptom rather than the cause.
As a weightlifter and long-distance runner, I can relate. Over the years, I’ve dealt with chronically tight hamstrings, assuming that if I kept stretching them, they’d loosen up. But it never seemed to work, and I couldn't figure out why.
According to physical therapists, the term “tight” hamstrings is a bit of a misnomer. Oftentimes, the muscle isn’t actually shortened at all. Instead, it’s overworked and under constant tension because it’s compensating for other weaknesses in your body.
“In reality, many people with ‘tight’ hamstrings actually have hamstrings that are over-lengthened and overworked, not shortened,” says Wendie Green, LPTA, Clinic Director at Bethesda Physical Therapy. “That tight, grabby feeling could be your hamstrings doing more than their fair share of the work to stabilize the pelvis.”
To fix the issue, you need to look beyond the hamstrings themselves. Here’s what’s actually causing that tight feeling—and what to do about it.
Why Your Hamstrings Feel Tight in the First Place
Your hamstrings are part of a larger system that includes your glutes, hips, and core, all of which need to work together to help your body move and stay active. When that system functions like a well-oiled engine, your hamstrings help out with movement and force production. But when certain muscles aren’t doing their job, research says your hamstrings step in to compensate, taking on a stabilizing role they aren’t designed to handle on their own.
One of the main reasons your hamstrings feel tight could be sitting too much. “Prolonged sitting is becoming an increasingly common cause [of tight hamstrings],” says Adam Fujita, PT, DPT, CAFS. “Sitting in the same position for long periods can lead to the tightening or shortening of muscles, and over time, even atrophy. Failing to regularly move risks reducing strength, balance, and even stability in key lower body muscles, increasing the likelihood of suffering from discomfort in the hamstrings as they become overworked.”
Additionally, weak glutes and tight hips can make your hamstrings feel tight. When your glutes aren’t firing properly during movements like hinging, running, or lifting, your hamstrings are forced to take over as the primary driver of hip extension. The result is a tightness, even though the muscles may already be lengthened.
Related: How to Do the "World's Greatest Stretch," the Single Best Dynamic Warmup
Why Stretching Won’t Fix the Problem
Your hamstrings feel tight, so it’s natural to want to stretch them. But while stretching can help reduce stiffness and improve range of motion in the short term, it doesn’t address the reasons why your hamstrings are under constant tension.
“Dynamic stretches (active movements) are generally better before workouts, while static stretches (slower, sustained movements) are best saved for cooldowns or recovery sessions,” explains Fujita. “More importantly, focusing exclusively on the hamstrings ignores the role of surrounding muscles. If the glutes, hips, and core remain weak or inactive, the hamstrings will continue to pick up the slack, and the tightness will keep returning.
How to Relieve Hamstring Tightness
To remedy tight hamstrings, shift your focus from the muscle itself to the system it operates within. Instead of trying to stretch and lengthen your hamstrings, your goal should be to restore balance and improve how your body moves as a whole.
Fujita recommends incorporating dynamic movement-based exercises into your routine that help improve mobility and coordination. Specifically, he recommends spinal rotations, roll-downs, and windmills.
“These three stretches can help tackle tension that builds from long hours of sitting or intense training, especially in the hamstrings and lower back,” says Fujita. “They can help your body feel less stiff, lighter, and more balanced over time.” These movements are effective because they don’t isolate the hamstrings—they train the body to move more efficiently across multiple joints.
In my experience, taking two to three days off from exercises that heavily engage the hamstrings—like running, deadlifts, and squats—and adding yoga and Pilates to my routine has helped ease my chronic hamstring tightness and improved how I feel and move.
The Long-Term Fix Most People Overlook
When the muscles surrounding your hamstrings are doing their job, your hamstrings no longer need to act as the main stabilizing muscles. As a result, the constant tension that creates the sensation of tightness begins to fade away, allowing you to move better and feel your best.
If your hamstrings always feel tight, it’s worth rethinking your workout routine and habits. In most cases, the issue isn’t that the hamstrings need more stretching; it’s that they’re doing too much work in a system that isn’t functioning properly. Fix that system by giving your hamstrings time to rest and incorporating dynamic movements that strengthen the surrounding muscles—and the tightness will resolve itself.