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What’s the Difference Between Resistance Bands and Weights?

Find out which type of resistance is best for you and your fitness goals.

By Michelle Konstantinovsky29 July 2024

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You’ve probably gotten the message by now: strength training is a vital part of a well-balanced fitness program, and it’s essential for building lean muscle mass, developing strong bones, and improving your overall quality of life. It also comes with a steep learning curve and the potential for a lot of stuff. While you can certainly build strength through bodyweight exercise, accessories like dumbbells, kettlebells, resistance bands, and more can take your workout to the next level. 

Options are great, but they can also be overwhelming. So when it comes to strength training, what’s really better for you and what will help you achieve your goals: resistance bands or weights?

Resistance Bands vs. Weights: Resistance

While dumbbells and free weights are often the tools most often associated with strength training, the truth is that you can make strength gains with many forms of equipment (including your own bodyweight!)—and that includes resistance bands. While the way you use each type of equipment will look very different, the end goal is exactly the same: to get stronger. 

It is, however, important to understand what “getting stronger” can entail. When you use heavy resistance, you actually increase the physical size of your muscles, a concept known as hypertrophy. This is a specific form of strength training (otherwise known as resistance training), an umbrella term that also includes stabilization, endurance, power (producing the greatest possible force in the shortest amount of time) and actual strength (the ability to move increasingly heavy external loads with your muscles).  

“Building muscle (hypertrophy) and getting stronger are related, but definitely distinct goals,” says Peloton instructor Matty Maggiacomo. “Building muscle focuses on increasing muscle size, typically through moderate weights and higher repetitions. Getting stronger involves increasing the amount of weight lifted, often with lower repetitions.”

According to Matty, strength training goals are highly individualized, but there’s no need to pick just one lane. “You can get stronger without significantly increasing muscle size, as strength gains can result from improved neural adaptations and ‘mental toughness,’ he says. “Conversely, you can build muscle with only modest strength gains through hypertrophy-focused training. However, the two often complement each other. Ideally, we like to ‘have our cake and eat it too’ by getting stronger while also building muscle!”

And the good news is, you can have your metaphorical cake by using either weights or resistance bands because both can help you accomplish a variety of strength training goals. “Lifting heavy weights is effective for building muscle and strength, but it is not the only way,” Matty says. “Muscle growth and strength can also be achieved through higher repetitions with moderate weights (provided the muscles are worked to fatigue) and resistance bands!” 

And if you’re scratching your head over the definition of “heavy,” Matty has a straightforward interpretation. “‘Heavy’ refers to lifting a weight that challenges your muscles near their maximum capacity,” he says. “While resistance bands can provide significant resistance, achieving very high levels of resistance is often easier with free weights. However, bands can still effectively build muscle and strength when used properly. Resistance bands typically come in different thickness levels which create more resistance.”

Resistance Bands Basics

Resistance bands come in many varieties, but generally speaking, they’re bands made of elastic or fabric that can be used to build tension or—you guessed it—resistance while performing certain exercises. Beyond just helping you build strength (which resistance bands can do effectively), they can also help with injury prevention by improving mobility, stability, and flexibility. You can find plain elastic resistance bands in simple strips or loops, as well as elastic or fabric tubes that come with handles or other attachments. Many also come in color-coded packs, indicating the thickness, and subsequently the level of resistance, each band provides.  

“They create resistance by stretching, which works muscles throughout the range of motion,” Matty says. “This resistance increases as the band is stretched, providing progressive resistance that challenges muscles and stimulates growth. I love using resistance bands when I travel!”

Not only can resistance bands be used to work out, but research has shown they can also be ideal tools for rehabbing certain injuries, recovering from some surgical procedures, or may help rebuild strength after a major health crisis such as a stroke.

Free Weights Basics

The definition of a “free weight” is pretty broad, as it includes pretty much any weighted object that isn’t physically attached to a machine. While gym machines typically provide resistance through cables or stacks of weight, free weights are the weights themselves, which you can move freely through a range of exercises, without being restricted to any one machine.

“Free weights, including dumbbells, barbells, and kettlebells, provide resistance through gravity,” Matty says. “They require stabilization and engage multiple muscle groups, promoting muscle strength and hypertrophy. Unlike resistance bands, free weights offer constant resistance.”

If you’ve taken a Peloton Strength class or program, then you’re likely most familiar with dumbbells, which are handheld bars with weights attached on both ends. A barbell is a longer bar with weights attached at either end, and a kettlebell is a cast-iron or cast-steel ball attached to a top handle. All of these pieces of equipment can be used in a variety of strength training exercises. 

Resistance Bands vs. Weights: The Benefits and Limitations of Each

As with just about any array of options, you’re likely to find pros and cons associated with both resistance bands and free weights. Both forms of equipment can provide a variety of benefits, but each also comes with some distinct limitations. Knowing your priorities (Are you always on the road? Are you looking to build muscle mass more quickly?) can help you sort out which option is best for you and your goals. 

Resistance Bands Benefits and Limitations

Benefits:

  • Cost-effective. Depending on where you buy them and what type you choose, a set of elastic resistance bands can cost under $20.

  • Compact and versatile. Unlike free weights and machines, resistance bands are incredibly compact, portable, and versatile, making them ideal travel tools.  

  • Low impact on joints. Because they provide smooth, constant tension, resistance bands can be much easier on the joints than free weights or machines that tend to put additional pressure on the joints. 

  • Provide variable resistance. Free weights provide “constant resistance,” meaning your muscles work with the same amount of resistance throughout each phase of a move. Resistance bands provide “variable resistance,” meaning the amount of tension against your muscles changes as you go through a movement because as you stretch the band, you produce more resistance. Some research has shown that variable resistance training (VRT) can help overcome the “sticking point” of conventional strength training (i.e. the part of the movement where you get “stuck” because your range of motion is limited).

  • Good for rehabilitation. Because resistance bands are easy on the joints and allow you to move through a wide range of motion, they can help rebuild strength and improve mobility—both important aspects of injury recovery.

Limitations:

  • Limited maximum resistance. At a certain point, you can only stretch a resistance band so far—once you max out its elasticity, you have to move up to a tighter band for more of a challenge. And while most everyday athletes are likely fine sticking to the standard bands on the market, more advanced powerlifters and athletes might need more challenging forms of strength training than the strongest available resistance bands can provide.   

  • Less effective for building maximal strength. Because free weights theoretically have a limitless maximum, even the fittest athletes can keep building strength and muscle by progressively adding more weight to their routine. Given the resistance limitation of bands, they may not be as effective or efficient for building hypertrophy and strength. 

  • Can be difficult to measure progress. Unlike free weights, which are easy to track (for example, you may start working on tricep kickbacks with a 5-pound dumbbell and document your progress as you get stronger and move up to 10 pounds over time), resistance bands are a bit more ambiguous since you won’t know the exact amount of weight you’re pulling each and every time you perform a movement. 

Free Weights Benefits and Limitations

Benefits:

  • Effective for building strength and muscle mass. Free weights allow you to move through a full range of motion for any given move, with the heaviest resistance you can handle. This combo makes progressive overload (i.e. gradually increasing the stress or demand placed on the body over time) possible, which in turn helps efficiently and effectively build strength, endurance, and other fitness measures. 

  • Provide constant resistance. The variable resistance of bands can be good for challenging your muscles in unique ways, but the constant resistance of free weights makes it easier to lift with precision—you know exactly how much weight you’re lifting during each rep, and your reps are consistent across all sets and workouts. This kind of accuracy typically makes progressive overload easier to execute correctly.  

  • Versatile. While weight machines are designed to be safely used in one or a few specific ways, free weights can be used in a variety of exercises that target all parts of the body. For example, you can use the same set of dumbbells to perform everything from an overhead press to a reverse lunge to a sumo squat and more.  

  • Easy to track progress. Because of their precise and consistent measurements, free weights ensure easy progress tracking —something that’s a little tougher to do with resistance bands, since the tension can vary, depending on how far you stretch the band. Accurately tracking your progress is yet another way to properly achieve progressive overload and make more strength and muscle gains

Limitations:

  • Risk of injury if not used correctly. While resistance bands are generally considered safe for all levels, free weights come with some risks, including dropping the weight on any part of your body.

  • Require proper technique. Proper alignment is always important—no matter what kind of workout you’re doing—but lifting free weights with incorrect form could be particularly problematic, leading to strains, sprains, and injuries over time.

  • May need more space and equipment. Aside from having a higher price point, free weights also take up a lot more space than resistance bands, and are therefore less than ideal for travel or working out on the go. 

How to Ultimately Choose Between Resistance Bands vs. Weights

Ultimately, resistance bands and free weights are both great options for building muscle and strength, but the choice you make between the two comes down to your personal objectives. “Consider your goals,” Matty says. “If maximal strength or muscle mass is the primary goal, free weights are generally more effective. If convenience, portability, or joint-friendly options are needed, resistance bands are a good choice.”

And while it might be tempting to invest all your fitness hopes into one specific form of strength training, the ideal workout plan isn’t about pledging allegiance to one form of equipment over another. In an ideal world, both resistance bands and free weights make regular appearances in your regimen. “For a well-rounded program, using both can provide the benefits of constant and variable resistance, improve stabilization, and prevent plateaus,” Matty says.

This content is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute individualized advice. It is not intended to replace professional medical evaluation, diagnosis, or treatment. Seek the advice of your physician for questions you may have regarding your health or a medical condition. If you are having a medical emergency, call your physician or 911 immediately.


This content is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute individualized advice. It is not intended to replace professional medical evaluation, diagnosis, or treatment. Seek the advice of your physician for questions you may have regarding your health or a medical condition. If you are having a medical emergency, call your physician or 911 immediately.

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Featured Peloton Instructor

Matty Maggiacomo

Matty Maggiacomo

A born entertainer, former television reporter, and pop culture guru, Matty loves to infuse storytelling and humor into every workout.

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