Reading time: 15 minutes | Last updated: May 2026
Lower back pain from deadlifts is one of the most common complaints in strength training — and one of the most misunderstood. Most lifters either push through it until it becomes a serious injury, or stop deadlifting entirely when they don’t need to. This UK and Europe guide covers every cause, gives you a self-diagnosis framework, and provides specific fixes for each one.
Table of Contents
- Lower Back Anatomy for Deadlifters
- The 6 Most Common Causes of Lower Back Pain from Deadlifts
- How to Diagnose Your Specific Issue
- Fix #1: Form Breakdown — The Most Common Cause
- Fix #2: Erector Spinae Muscle Strain
- Fix #3: Disc Irritation or Herniation
- Fix #4: SI Joint Dysfunction
- Fix #5: Training Load Overload
- How Your Footwear Affects Lower Back Pain from Deadlifts
- The Prevention Protocol
- Green, Amber, Red — When to Train Through It vs Stop
- When to See a Physio or Doctor in the UK
- Bottom Line
- FAQ
🦴 Lower Back Anatomy for Deadlifters
The lumbar spine (L1–L5) is the primary load-bearing structure in the deadlift. Key structures at risk:
- Erector spinae — the large muscle group running along the spine. Primary stabiliser during the deadlift. Most commonly strained.
- Lumbar discs (L4-L5, L5-S1) — most commonly irritated or herniated in deadlifters. Vulnerable to flexion under load.
- Sacroiliac (SI) joint — connects the sacrum to the pelvis. Dysfunction causes one-sided lower back pain near the tailbone.
- Quadratus lumborum (QL) — deep muscle connecting the lower ribs to the pelvis. Commonly strained in asymmetrical setups.
Research in Spine journal confirms that lumbar flexion under load is the primary mechanical driver of disc-related lower back injuries in deadlifters.
⚠️ The 6 Most Common Causes of Lower Back Pain from Deadlifts
| Cause | Type of Pain | When It Appears |
|---|---|---|
| Form breakdown (rounded lower back) | Central, deep ache or sharp | During or immediately after lifting |
| Erector spinae strain | Muscular ache, bilateral | 24–48 hours after session |
| Disc irritation / herniation | Sharp, may radiate to leg | During lift or hours after |
| SI joint dysfunction | One-sided, near tailbone | During or after, worse with rotation |
| Training load overload | Diffuse fatigue/ache | Accumulates over training block |
| Poor footwear mechanics | Diffuse, worsens with load | Throughout session, every session |
🔍 How to Diagnose Your Specific Issue
Step 1: When did the pain start?
- During the lift, sharp and sudden → acute strain or disc event. Stop immediately.
- During the lift, gradual build → form breakdown under fatigue or load overload.
- 24–48 hours after → erector spinae DOMS or strain. Usually resolves in 3–5 days.
- Accumulates over weeks → chronic overload or disc irritation building.
Step 2: Where exactly is the pain?
- Central lower back, both sides → erector spinae strain or disc
- One side only, near the tailbone → SI joint dysfunction or QL strain
- Radiates into the glute or down the leg → disc herniation with nerve involvement. See a physio or GP immediately.
- Diffuse, hard to pinpoint → overload or footwear-related
🛠️ Fix #1: Form Breakdown — The Most Common Cause
What it is: Lumbar flexion under load — the lower back rounds during the pull. The most common and most preventable cause of deadlift-related back pain.
The Fix Protocol
- 📌 Drop the weight 20–30% and rebuild mechanics before adding load back.
- 📌 Bar over mid-foot at setup — 2–3cm from the shins. Film from the side to check.
- 📌 Brace before you pull: big breath into the belly, 360° brace, hold throughout the rep.
- 📌 Push the floor away rather than pulling the bar up — cues leg drive and keeps the back flat.
- 📌 Romanian deadlifts (RDLs): 3 x 8 with moderate weight. Teaches hip hinge with neutral spine. See: Romanian Deadlift Guide — UK & Europe.
🛠️ Fix #2: Erector Spinae Muscle Strain
What it is: Muscular strain of the erectors — bilateral ache appearing 24–48 hours after a heavy session. Usually resolves in 3–7 days with proper management.
The Fix Protocol
- 📌 Active rest — not complete rest: Light walking maintains blood flow. Complete bed rest slows recovery.
- 📌 Heat after 48 hours: Heat pack 15–20 minutes, 2–3x daily.
- 📌 Cat-cow stretches: 2 x 10 reps, slow and controlled.
- 📌 Child’s pose: 2 x 60 seconds. Decompresses the lumbar spine.
- 📌 Return to deadlifting at 50% load once pain is below 3/10.
Timeline: 3–7 days mild. 2–4 weeks moderate.
🛠️ Fix #3: Disc Irritation or Herniation
What it is: Intervertebral disc irritation or herniation (most commonly L4-L5 or L5-S1). Pain can be central or radiate into the glute and down the leg.
The Fix Protocol — Disc Irritation (no radiation)
- 📌 McKenzie extension exercises: Prone press-ups, 3 x 10. Supported by extensive research for disc-related lower back pain.
- 📌 Avoid lumbar flexion under load for 4–6 weeks.
- 📌 Switch to trap bar deadlifts: More upright torso, less lumbar stress.
- 📌 Core stability work: Dead bugs, bird dogs, pallof press.
If pain radiates into the leg — stop training the lower back and see a physio or GP immediately.
🛠️ Fix #4: SI Joint Dysfunction
What it is: Sacroiliac joint irritation causing one-sided lower back pain near the tailbone. Frequently misdiagnosed as disc pain.
The Fix Protocol
- 📌 SI joint compression belt during training.
- 📌 Glute strengthening: Hip thrusts, clamshells, single-leg RDLs.
- 📌 Avoid asymmetrical loading until pain resolves.
- 📌 Physio assessment recommended — responds well to manual therapy.
🛠️ Fix #5: Training Load Overload
What it is: Accumulated fatigue from too much volume or intensity too quickly. Pain is diffuse, builds over a training block, no specific onset moment.
The Fix Protocol
- 📌 Deload immediately: Reduce deadlift volume 50–60% for 1–2 weeks.
- 📌 Review total posterior chain volume across the week.
- 📌 Prioritise sleep and nutrition. See: Sleep & Recovery for Strength Athletes — UK & Europe.
👟 How Your Footwear Affects Lower Back Pain from Deadlifts
Weightlifting shoes with an elevated heel are excellent for squats but mechanically counterproductive for deadlifts. The heel elevation tilts the pelvis anteriorly and increases lumbar lordosis — adding lower back stress under load. UK lifters deadlifting in weightlifting shoes should switch to a flat sole for pulls.
The Right Footwear for Deadlifts
- ✅ Flat, rigid-soled shoes — Converse, Vans, or dedicated deadlift shoes
- ✅ Deadlift slippers — minimal sole, maximum floor contact
- ✅ Barefoot (where permitted) — eliminates all heel elevation
See: Weightlifting Shoes vs Deadlift Shoes 2026 and Best Deadlift Shoes 2026 — UK & Europe.
Deadlifting in weightlifting shoes? That elevated heel may be loading your lower back differently than you think. Switch to a flat sole for pulls.
🛡️ The Prevention Protocol
Before Every Deadlift Session
- Cat-cow — 2 x 10 slow reps
- Hip hinge with dowel rod — 2 x 10
- Dead bugs — 2 x 8 each side
- Light RDLs — 2 x 10 at 40% working weight
Programming Rules
- Never increase deadlift volume AND intensity in the same week
- Maximum 2 heavy deadlift sessions per week
- Deload every 4–6 weeks — reduce volume 40–50%
- Film every heavy set from the side
🚦 Green, Amber, Red — When to Train Through It vs Stop
| Signal | What It Means | Action |
|---|---|---|
| 🟢 Mild ache 0–3/10, resolves with warm-up | Manageable fatigue | Train. Reduce volume 20%. Monitor. |
| 🟡 Pain 4–6/10, consistent, no radiation | Strain or disc irritation | No deadlifts. Switch to trap bar. See physio if no improvement in 1 week. |
| 🔴 Pain 7+/10, radiates to leg, sudden onset | Possible disc herniation | Stop immediately. See a physio or GP. |
🏥 When to See a Physio or Doctor in the UK
See a physiotherapist or GP immediately if you experience:
- ❌ Pain radiating into the glute, hamstring, or below the knee
- ❌ Numbness or tingling in the leg or foot
- ❌ Sudden sharp pain during a lift that doesn’t resolve
- ❌ Bladder or bowel changes (rare but serious — call 999 or go to A&E)
- ❌ Pain that doesn’t improve after 4–6 weeks of conservative management
UK access: NHS self-referral to physiotherapy is available in most areas — search “NHS physiotherapy self-referral [your area].” Private sports physio offers faster access. In Europe, access varies by country — a GP referral is typically required for specialist care.
🏆 Bottom Line
Lower back pain from deadlifts is almost always caused by one of five things: form breakdown, muscle strain, disc irritation, SI joint dysfunction, or training load overload. Identify your cause, apply the specific fix, and check your footwear — deadlifting in elevated-heel shoes adds lower back stress that’s easily corrected. Most deadlift-related lower back pain resolves within 2–6 weeks with the right protocol.
Fix your form. Fix your footwear. Get back to pulling heavy.
How to Deadlift with Proper Form → Best Deadlift Shoes 2026 — UK →FAQ
Why does my lower back hurt after deadlifts?
Most commonly: erector spinae muscle strain (appears 24–48 hours after), form breakdown under load, or accumulated training overload. Use the diagnosis framework above.
Should I deadlift with lower back pain?
Mild ache (0–3/10) resolving with warm-up — train with reduced volume. Pain 4+/10 or any radiating symptoms — stop and apply the relevant fix protocol.
Can deadlifts cause a herniated disc?
Yes — repeated lumbar flexion under load is the primary mechanism. Neutral spine throughout the pull is the most important prevention measure.
How long does lower back pain from deadlifts take to heal?
Muscle strain: 3–7 days. Moderate strain: 2–4 weeks. Disc irritation: 4–8 weeks. Disc herniation: 6–12 weeks or longer.
Should I deadlift in weightlifting shoes?
No — the elevated heel increases lumbar lordosis and changes bar path mechanics. Use flat-soled shoes for deadlifts. See: Weightlifting Shoes vs Deadlift Shoes 2026.
Can I self-refer to a physio in the UK for back pain?
Yes — NHS self-referral is available in most areas. Private sports physio offers faster access. Search “NHS physiotherapy self-referral [your area]” for local options.
Is it normal to have lower back soreness after deadlifts?
Mild bilateral soreness 24–48 hours after a heavy session is normal DOMS. Sharp, one-sided, or radiating pain is not normal and requires attention.
What’s the best deadlift shoe for lower back health?
A flat, rigid-soled shoe with zero heel elevation. See: Best Deadlift Shoes 2026 — UK & Europe.
Related Articles
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- Romanian Deadlift Guide — UK & Europe
- Sumo vs Conventional Deadlift — UK & Europe
- Weightlifting Shoes vs Deadlift Shoes 2026
- Best Deadlift Shoes 2026 — UK & Europe
- Sleep & Recovery for Strength Athletes — UK & Europe
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