Bodyweight exercises are great for building functional strength, especially when you’re on the go and don’t have access to a gym. They’re also great for building body awareness and stability.
While free weights are more effective for actually growing and building muscle, bodyweight exercises still deserve a place in your exercise routine.
Since bodyweight exercises are limited to your body mass, you’ll need to progress them over time by adding more volume, frequency, and difficulty to stimulate muscle growth. That said, if you perform bodyweight exercises well and progress them little by little, they can still provide good resistance that can stimulate muscle growth effectively.
Here are the best bodyweight exercises for building muscle. As a general principle, complete three sets of 10 reps for each exercise, increasing the overall volume of your workload over time.
This quintessential bodyweight exercise targets the upper body and challenges muscle groups like the triceps, pecs, and shoulders. If you can’t complete a regular push-up, you can always modify it by performing the movement from your knees instead of your feet.
Squats target the major muscle groups of the lower body, such as the quadriceps, or quads (front of thighs), glutes (butt), and hamstrings (back of thighs). It is a highly functional exercise and translates to many activities of daily living. You can always modify the depth of your squat depending on your mobility, so don’t feel pressured to go super low.
The plank is a classic bodyweight exercise that challenges many areas of your core, such as the transversus abdominis, rectus abdominis (“six-pack”), and oblique (side abdominal) muscles. If you find doing it from your toes too challenging, you can modify the difficulty of this exercise by doing it from your knees.
The glute bridge loads the hip extensor muscles and targets your glutes and hamstrings. When performing this movement, make sure you’re only extending your hips and not your lower back. Keep your abdominals (abs) braced to keep your spine neutral.
Lunges challenge your unilateral leg strength and load the quads, glutes, hamstrings, calves, and adductors. They build leg muscles while also challenging your balance and stability.
The side plank is a little different from the traditional plank. This movement loads the oblique (side ab) muscles to a greater extent and is great for spinal stability. If you find the exercise is too difficult with your feet stacked, modify it by performing it on your knees. You’ll get the same benefit but with less shoulder strength needed to hold yourself up.
This lunge variation also loads the muscles targeted in the walking lunge, such as the quads, glutes, hamstrings, calves, and adductors. However, the movement occurs in the frontal plane, moving side to side, as opposed to forward lunges, which occur in the sagittal plane (forward and backward).
Working movements in the frontal plane offer a challenging novel stimulus, as most movements in life occur in the sagittal plane.
This exercise is just as aerobic as it is strength-dominant. From rep to rep, it will challenge the muscles of your entire body and cardiovascular system. If it’s too challenging, you can modify the difficulty by skipping the jump part.
If jumping jacks bring back memories of gym class, there’s a reason this bodyweight exercise has stood the test of time. It challenges your entire body and also gets your heart pumping.
This exercise focuses on the gastrocnemius and soleus, the muscles that comprise your calves. It isolates them perfectly, and you’ll feel the burn after just a few reps.
While technically a plyometric exercise, this movement also challenges the strength of your lower body muscles and works your fast-twitch muscle fibers, which are key for explosive movements and power.
Feel free to modify the height of the box depending on how difficult you want it to be. Start low and go higher as you get stronger.
This bodyweight core drill helps train neutral spinal mechanics and challenges your deep abdominal muscles.
To build muscle, you need to implement the principle of “progressive overload”, which basically just means gradually increasing the demand (weight) placed on your muscles over time through increased resistance, repetitions, sets, frequency, or difficulty.
Since bodyweight exercises are limited to your body mass, you’ll need to progress them over time by adding more volume, frequency, and difficulty to stimulate muscle growth adequately. However, when loaded in the proper anatomical position and progressed properly, bodyweight exercises still provide adequate resistance to build muscle effectively.
Externally loaded movements (for example, using free weights) build muscle mass more effectively because they can be progressively overloaded by adding more resistance over time. Bodyweight exercises are limited to your body mass and, therefore, have a cap on their overload capability.
However, they are still a form of resistance and can contribute to muscular hypertrophy if done and progressed properly. You can effectively use them to strengthen almost every muscle in your body.
Bodyweight exercises can help build muscle when performed correctly and progressed effectively over time.
In addition to your bodyweight workouts, make sure to incorporate free weight exercises into your routine, as bodyweight exercises can only get you so far in terms of strength and muscle mass.