How long can you hold a bridge after 55? Here is the elite benchmark.
The glute bridge is one of the most fundamental exercises you can do. It shows up early in training for a reason. You’re learning how to drive through your hips, use your glutes, and support your spine in a simple, controlled position. It’s basic, but it covers a lot. When it’s done well, it lays a foundation that carries over to almost every lower-body movement.
From a coaching standpoint, I come back to the bridge all the time. It’s one of the quickest ways to see how well someone actually uses their glutes. I’ve worked with plenty of people who stay active and train consistently, but when they get into a bridge, it tells a different story. Their hips come up, but the tension isn’t where it should be. That usually shows up later as fatigue in the lower back or a lack of control during other movements.
Holding the bridge takes that a step further. It removes any momentum and asks your glutes to stay on and do their job the entire time. The longer you can keep your hips level and your position steady, the better your glutes tend to support you during everything else you do.
What the Bridge Hold Really Trains
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The bridge puts your glutes front and center. Once your hips come off the ground, they’re responsible for holding that position and keeping everything steady. Your hamstrings and core support the effort, but if the glutes aren’t doing their job, you’ll feel the shift pretty quickly.
What makes this different from a lot of other movements is that there’s no reset between reps. You lift into position and stay there. Your muscles have to keep producing force the entire time instead of turning on and off. That’s what builds the kind of strength that carries over to walking, climbing stairs, and staying on your feet for longer stretches.
You’ll also notice how well your hips stay organized and aligned if performed properly, of course. If one side starts to take over, your pelvis will tilt or rotate just enough to feel it. Holding a level, steady position from start to finish shows your glutes can stay engaged and keep your hips where they should be.
How to Set Up a Bridge That Actually Counts
A lot of people rush this or turn it into a lower-back hold. The setup is what makes this effective.
How to Do It:
- Lie on your back with your knees bent and your feet flat on the floor about hip-width apart.
- Place your arms at your sides with your palms down.
- Brace your core before you move.
- Press through your heels and lift your hips until your shoulders, hips, and knees line up.
- Squeeze your glutes and keep your ribs down so your lower back stays neutral.
- Hold the position while breathing steadily and keeping your hips level.
Best Variations: Single-Leg Bridge, Marching Bridge, Elevated Feet Bridge, Banded Bridge Hold, Hip Thrust Hold.
How Your Bridge Hold Time Stacks Up
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Your time only counts if your position stays consistent. Once your hips drop or your lower back starts to take over, that’s your endpoint.
- Under 30 seconds: You’re building the base here. Focus on feeling your glutes and holding a steady position.
- 30 to 60 seconds: This is a solid range. Your glutes are engaged and supporting your hips through the hold.
- 60 to 90 seconds: Now you’re getting into strong territory. You can maintain tension and keep your position from drifting.
- 90+ seconds: This is elite. Your glutes stay fully engaged, your hips stay level, and your position holds without shifting.
How to Build Glute Strength That Holds Up
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Building a stronger bridge comes down to developing tension you can maintain, not just pushing for longer holds. The goal is to keep your hips stable, your glutes engaged, and your core supporting the position from start to finish. When that improves, it carries over into how you move, walk, and handle longer stretches on your feet.
- Practice bridges consistently: A few sets each week help build strength and endurance without overcomplicating things.
- Set your position before you lift: A good brace and proper foot placement make the hold more effective.
- Keep the work in your glutes: You should feel them doing the majority of the work throughout the hold.
- Maintain alignment: Keep your ribs down and your hips level as time adds up.
- Use shorter, controlled holds: Multiple sets with clean form build better strength than one long hold where things drift.
- Add single-leg work over time: This helps clean up imbalances and improves control.
- Train your hips with other movements: Step-ups, split squats, and hip thrusts all support a stronger bridge.
- Stay consistent: Strength here builds over time with repeated exposure.
References
- Lehecka, B J et al. “BUILDING A BETTER GLUTEAL BRIDGE: ELECTROMYOGRAPHIC ANALYSIS OF HIP MUSCLE ACTIVITY DURING MODIFIED SINGLE-LEG BRIDGES.” International journal of sports physical therapy vol. 12,4 (2017): 543-549.
- Goller, Maximilian et al. “How to activate the glutes best? Peak muscle activity of acceleration-specific pre-activation and traditional strength training exercises.” European journal of applied physiology vol. 124,6 (2024): 1757-1769. doi:10.1007/s00421-023-05400-3
Jarrod Nobbe, MA, CSCS
Jarrod Nobbe is a USAW National Coach, Sports Performance Coach, Personal Trainer, and writer, and has been involved in health and fitness for the past 12 years. Read more about Jarrod

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