Unlock Your Potential: The Best Hypermobility Exercises for Strength and Stability
Understanding Hypermobility
Hypermobility means your joints move beyond the typical range. While this can seem like an advantage, it often comes at the cost of joint stability, muscle coordination, and long-term structural integrity. Without targeted intervention, hypermobile joints are more vulnerable to subluxations, chronic pain, and early degeneration.
The Functional Patterns (FP) approach treats hypermobility as a whole-body systems problem, not just a local tissue issue. We focus on building strength in the ranges you need for movement in life, rather than feeding into the instability by over-stretching or isolating muscles in non-functional ways.
Benefits of targeted FP training for hypermobility:
Improved structural integrity across the myofascial system
Greater control through end ranges of motion
Reduced risk of repetitive strain injuries
Better proprioception and coordination in dynamic movement
Core Strength Exercises
Essential core stability workouts
For hypermobility, “core” isn’t just abs — it’s your diaphragm, pelvic floor, obliques, transverse abdominis, multifidus, and how they coordinate with the hips and shoulders.
Standing Pallof Press with Step — Builds anti-rotation capacity while integrating the lower body.
Wall-Anchored Oblique Crunch with Exhale Hold — Improves ribcage-pelvis connection, which is often unstable in hypermobile clients.
Incorporating functional movement patterns
Every exercise should mimic forces you encounter in gait. For example, using contralateral load (weight on one side, movement on the opposite) teaches the body to resist collapse into unstable ranges.
Rehabilitation Exercises
Developing injury prevention strategies
The aim is to teach your joints where “home base” is. We do this with controlled, low-velocity drills before layering in dynamic force.
Closed-Chain Hip Internal Rotation in Split Stance — Reinforces femur stability in gait.
Single-Arm Band Row with Opposite Hip Extension — Trains thoracic-pelvic coordination, reducing spinal shear forces.
The role of controlled movements
Every repetition is about slowing down the joint at the right point, not moving as far as possible. This builds neural pathways for joint protection.
Proprioception Training
Importance of proprioception in stability
Hypermobile individuals often have dulled joint position sense, which means their body doesn’t know exactly where it is in space. This increases injury risk.
Techniques for enhancing body awareness
Barefoot Balance Drills on Firm Ground — No unstable surfaces; we want accuracy, not chaos.
Step-to-Rotation Drill — Stepping forward, grounding the stance leg, and rotating the torso against band resistance to train foot-to-head awareness.
Flexibility and Stability
Dynamic stretching routines
We avoid passive, end-range stretching. Instead, FP dynamic drills lengthen tissues while under tension so you maintain control.
Lunge with Overhead Reach and Lat Engagement — Opens hip flexors while keeping spinal alignment.
Strength-building exercises that improve flexibility
Controlled eccentric work (slow lowering phases) in multi-joint movements increases strength and usable range, so you’re not relying on lax ligaments for mobility.
Why FP Works for Hypermobility
Unlike generic physio or Pilates prescriptions, Functional Patterns builds patterns for walking, running, and throwing — the foundational movements humans evolved to perform. This not only reduces symptoms but upgrades how your entire system operates, leading to lasting joint stability and improved athletic capacity.