FREE WEIGHTS VS. RESISTANCE BANDS: HERE ARE THE PROS AND CONS OF EACH

FREE WEIGHTS VS. RESISTANCE BANDS: HERE ARE THE PROS AND CONS OF EACH

Strength training is like climbing a mountain, with lots of ways to get to the top. Two of the most common? Training with free weights (like dumbbells or kettlebells) or resistance bands (whether short ones you put around your ankles or knees, or longer ones you anchor somewhere else).

Evangelists of either type of training will tell you why their go-to is superior. But the truth is, a well-designed strength-training routine can incorporate either (or, even better, both!). Here are some factors to consider when you’re deciding whether to pump iron or… stretch latex.

The key difference between weights and resistance bands

Though both weights and resistance bands can challenge your muscles to build strength, they each do so slightly differently. 

For one, weights provide constant resistance, meaning no matter where you are in your bicep curl, your 15-pound weights are still going to be 15 pounds. “However, the difficulty of the exercise is different depending on the arc of motion,” explains Heather Milton, MS, RCEP, CSCS, an exercise physiologist at NYU Langone’s Sports Performance Center. “The closer to you the weight is, the easier it is, and the further away from you the harder it is.” That means that your bicep is most stressed when it is lengthened (at the bottom of the curl).


Resistance bands, on the other hand, have variable resistance, meaning the resistance changes depending on how much the band is stretched. So, a bicep curl with a band is going to be most difficult at a completely different moment—at the very top, when your muscle is shortened and the band is at its most taut. “You’re getting that bonus of it being more challenging at the end of the concentric (or shortening) but also the beginning of the eccentric (or lengthening) part of the exercise,” says Milton. “It lends towards greater neuromuscular coordination, motor unit recruitment, and improvements in strength.”

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