Sports & Active5 min read

Knee Cracking When You Squat — Should You Worry?

DC. Michiko Liew

DC. Michiko Liew

Principal Chiropractor · 15 June 2026

That cracking or popping sound when you squat — patients ask about it almost daily. In most cases it's harmless. In a small number it's an early warning. The difference matters, because ignoring the second category can turn a manageable issue into a surgical one. Here's how to tell which camp your knees are in.

What the Sound Actually Is

Joint noises (crepitus) come from three main sources, and they are all surprisingly mundane:

  • Gas bubble cavitation. Synovial fluid contains dissolved gases. When joint pressure drops suddenly during a squat, those gases form and collapse small bubbles — the same mechanism behind knuckle cracks.
  • Ligaments and tendons snapping over bony prominences. The IT band, patellar tendon, and hamstring tendons can all click as they glide over knobby bits of bone.
  • Tendon glide changes. Slight thickening or stiffness can make a tendon move less smoothly over its track, producing a soft pop.

None of these mean cartilage damage on their own.

When Cracking Is Fine

You can usually ignore the sound when:

  • There is no pain accompanying it
  • There is no swelling around the joint
  • There is no instability or "giving way"
  • It doesn't get worse over weeks or months
  • Both knees do it (suggests it's just how your joints are built)

If you tick all of the above, your knee is probably fine and you can keep squatting.

When to Get It Checked

The picture changes if any of the following are present:

  • Pain accompanies the crack
  • A locking sensation, as if the knee catches
  • Swelling that comes and goes
  • The knee gives way under load
  • It's clearly asymmetric — one knee, not both
  • It started after a clear injury (twist, fall, sports collision)

Any single one of these warrants a proper assessment — not panic, just professional eyes.

Most Common Causes of Cracking

When the cracking is symptomatic, the usual suspects are:

  • Cartilage smoothness changes. Early cartilage roughening (chondromalacia patellae) produces a grinding crepitus, often described as feeling "sandy" inside the joint. Common in runners and squatters who increase load too quickly, and in office workers who suddenly start training without ramping up.
  • Meniscal flap. A small tear in the meniscus that flips during squat motion. Usually causes a deeper, single click rather than continuous noise. May be accompanied by a brief catching sensation.
  • Patellofemoral tracking issue. The kneecap doesn't glide centrally in its groove, producing a click and often a dull ache around the cap. Frequently linked to weak vastus medialis muscles or tight lateral quad structures.
  • Tight IT band. The band snaps over the lateral femoral condyle, producing a click on the outside of the knee. Common in cyclists and runners who don't roll out regularly.

None of these are catastrophic on their own. All of them respond to early, targeted intervention — the issue is letting them progress quietly for years.

The Hip-Knee-Spine Connection

This is the part most knee assessments miss. Knee tracking depends on hip alignment, which depends on pelvic position, which depends on the lumbar spine. A slightly rotated pelvis can pull the femur out of neutral, change how the kneecap tracks in its groove, and produce both the noise and the discomfort.

We see patients who have spent months on knee-specific exercises with limited progress, only for the picture to shift once the upstream chain is addressed. Sports injuries rarely happen in isolation — the tissue that fails is usually the one furthest down a chain of small compromises.

A Gonstead full-spine standing X-ray is one of the few assessments that visualises the whole chain at once. We can see whether the pelvis is level, whether the lumbar curve is loading the hip evenly, and whether the femur is sitting where it should. If your knee pain has resisted the usual stretches and exercises, the answer might be one floor up.

What to Do Next

If your cracking ticks any of the warning boxes — pain, swelling, locking, asymmetry — book an assessment at Sunway Geo, Sri Petaling, or Kota Damansara. We will check the knee, the hip, and the spine, and tell you honestly whether the noise is something to act on or something to ignore.

Questions about your spine?

Talk to one of our chiropractors.

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