The lower limbs of vehicle occupants are vulnerable to severe injuries during under vehicle explosions. Understanding the injury mechanism and causality of injury severity could aid in developing better protection. Therefore, we tested three different knee positions in standing occupants (standing, knee in hyper-extension, knee flexed at 20˚) of a simulated under‐vehicle explosion using cadaveric limbs in a traumatic blast injury simulator; the hypothesis was that occupant posture would affect injury severity. Skeletal injuries were minimal in the cadaveric limbs with the knees flexed at 20˚. Severe, impairing injuries were observed in the foot of standing and hyper‐extended specimens. Strain gauge measurements taken from the lateral calcaneus in the standing and hyper-extended positions were more than double the strain found in specimens with the knee flexed position. The results in this study demonstrate that a vehicle occupant whose posture incorporates knee flexion at the time of an under‐vehicle explosion is likely to reduce the severity of lower limb injuries, when compared to a knee extended position.