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The Best Bodyweight Compound Exercises To Build Strength

The Best Bodyweight Compound Exercises To Build Strength

We are going to let you in on a little secret: you do not need a gym membership to be physically active. There are multi-joint movements, such as squats and deadlifts, that work multiple muscle groups simultaneously. In fitness, these are known as compound exercises, which help burn fat and build muscle more efficiently. You can do these exercises with weight, or you can use your bodyweight. 

Bodyweight moves are quite versatile and you can do them almost anywhere. Do them in your hotel room on vacation, in a small apartment, or in your living room. Bodyweight compound exercises are also accessible and efficient, working as many muscles as possible in each move. 

Before we detail the following compound exercises, we want to let you know that this is not a workout routine or plan. You probably should not do all of these exercises in one routine. It would be better to choose two or three moves that target your upper body and another two to three that target your lower body. If you really want to get after it, you can do more than that, but start slow and build intensity from there. 

Reverse Lunge With Knee Drive

Get ready to activate your glutes, quads, and core with this compound exercise! Begin by standing up from your feet hip-distance apart. Take a controlled lunge, or large step, back with your left foot. As you lunge back with your left foot, drive your left arm in front of you (almost as if taking a running stride) to help maintain balance. Bend your right knee until your right thigh is parallel to the floor and your left knee is nearly touching the floor. From this position, Engage your right glute and quads to drive up and continue past the starting position to bring your left knee up as high as it will go. That is one rep. Complete a total of reps per side. You can rest for a minute or two between sets if you want to do multiple sets.

Air Squat

An air squat, or bodyweight squat, is a great way to engage your glutes, quads, hamstrings, and calves. Basically, it is a great lower-body exercise. Stand up straight with your feet slightly wider than your shoulders. Keep your feet parallel and turn your toes outward just a little. Bend your knees, sinking your hips back as if to sit down in a chair. Keep your weight back in your heels until you enter a low squat. Drive through your heels, engaging your glutes to return to the starting position. Complete three sets of 10 squats. 

Band-Assisted Pull-Up

For this exercise, you will need a pull-up bar and a resistance band. Secure a large resistance band around a pull-up bar. A band with more resistance will provide more assistance/momentum to pull yourself up. Stand on a stable object and step safely into the resistance band after grabbing the pull-up bar. With a neutral spine, engage your core and back to pull yourself up. The band will provide you with momentum to lift up. Lower down carefully to complete one rep. Complete a total of three sets of eight to 10 reps. 

Burpee

Doesn’t everyone love a good burpee? It’s a full-body exercise that helps to enhance both muscle and cardiovascular strength. Stand up straight and lower down into a crouching squat. Place your hands on the floor and jump your feet back to enter a high plank position. Complete one basic push-up (if you have the strength) before jumping your feet outside your hands to enter a low squat. Drive through your heels, engaging your glutes to explode into a jump, raising your arms overhead in the process. Land with bent knees for a softer landing. Since burpees are challenging, begin with three sets of four to six reps, and you can increase the number of reps per set as you see fit.

Basic Push-Up

Begin in a high plank position with your hands directly under your shoulders and back flat. Square your hips and engage your core to maintain stability. Take a deep breath in and bend your elbows as you exhale, lowering your chest to the ground. Once your shoulders are in line with your elbows, engage your chest and shoulders to push back up to the starting position. If that is too difficult, do this exercise with your knees on the floor. Complete three sets of eight to 10 reps. 

Single-Leg Bridge

Lie flat on your back, bend your knees, and place your feet flat on the ground about six inches or so from your buttocks. Place your arms flat on the ground for stability as you raise your right leg toward the ceiling. Press your left heel into the floor and engage your glutes to lift your pelvis off the ground, maintaining a stiff bridge position with your body. Slowly lower yourself back down to the ground to complete one rep. Complete a total of three sets of 10 reps per side. If the single-leg bridge is too difficult, keep both feet on the floor to do a regular bridge.

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