- Tight Hip Flexors or IT Band
- If the tensor fasciae latae (TFL) or outer hips are tight, they can pull the femur out of alignment during circling.
- Weak or Underactive Glutes + Deep Core
- When the core and stabilizers aren’t fully engaged, the pelvis may shift, causing clicking in the hip socket (especially anteriorly).
- Large Range of Motion
- Circling the leg too wide or too fast can disrupt pelvic stability — even slight lifting of the opposite hip can trigger clicks.
How to Adjust While Practicing:
- Reduce the circle size
Keep it small and controlled — even a quarter-circle is enough to challenge stability. - Slightly bend the circling leg
That can take tension off the hip and reduce clicking. - Deepen core connection before each rep
Think: “anchor opposite hip + draw navel to spine.” - Focus on breath + slow the pace
Slow circles give you better pelvic awareness and help prevent compensations.
Corrective Support You Can Add:
- Glute med activation (Clams, Side-lying leg lifts, Bridges)
- Pelvic stability drills (Dead bug, Marching with imprinted spine)
- Hip flexor release before starting (Lunge stretch, Foam roll quads)
If the click is not painful, it’s usually a sign of movement pattern imbalance rather than injury — and with time, control, and activation, it often improves or resolves.
Here’s Pelvis Prep Mini-Routine you can do before Leg Circles or before Series of 5 days to support stability.