Do you want a perfect workout? Of course you do, who doesn’t? The key to the perfect routine doesn’t lie in celebrity trainers or trendy gyms (although there’s certainly nothing wrong with them); the key lies in the perfect combination of cardio, strength training, core work, and functional movements.
When you get the combo right, you need nothing more than a handful of exercises, a timer, and a set of dumbbells. Stick with the programme and you’ll be in crazy-good shape before you know it.
Using nothing but the four exercises listed below, you can pick and choose between any of the fast-moving, hard-hitting workout routines that follow. Might you get tired of the same exercises all the time? Sure. When you do, just switch them!
Push-up burpees
The push-up burpee works pretty much your whole body, starting at your calves and running all the way up the stabilizing muscles of your core to your shoulders. Aside from the fact that this move is great for total-body strengthening, it also raises your heart rate for a burst of equipment-free cardio.
How to:
- Stand with feet hip-distance apart, knees slightly bent
- Squat down and place your hands on the ground just in front of your feet
- Hop or step your legs behind you to a high-plank position, core tight, shoulders over palms, hips aligned between your shoulders and knees
- Bend your elbows and do a push-up, lowering your chest toward the floor (you can drop your knees to the ground for a modified push-up, if needed)
- Press through your palms and return to the high-plank position
- Hop or step your feet back to their starting position
- Return to standing, or if desired, jump up into the air, landing with knees and hips slightly bent, before continuing the exercise
Related article: Six Exercises To Strengthen And Create a Rounder, Plumper Butt
Squat press
Combining an upper-body and lower-body exercise into one, compound movement is an excellent way to kill two birds with one stone. Grab a pair of dumbbells for the squat press, which targets the major muscle groups of the lower body — the quads, hamstrings, and glutes — as well as the shoulders and the stabilizing muscles of the core.
How to:
- Stand with feet slightly wider than hip-distance apart, knees slightly bent, holding a dumbbell in each hand at your shoulders
- Press your hips back and squat down, as if sitting on a chair, bending your knees and lowering your glutes toward the floor. Keep your chest up and core tight.
- When you’ve lowered yourself as far as you comfortably can while keeping your weight in your heels, your knees behind your toes, reverse the movement and press back to standing
- As you rise to standing, press the dumbbells straight up over your head, extending your arms fully
- Bring the dumbbells back to your shoulders before continuing
Related article: 30-Minute Dumbbell Workout That Targets The Whole Body And Can Be Done From Home
Deadlift row
Deadlift rows target your hamstrings, glutes, and core while also hitting the large muscles of your upper back, including your lats, traps, and rhomboids. Grab a set of dumbbells and be sure to check your form — you should feel this more in your glutes and hamstrings than your low back.
How to:
- Stand with feet hip-distance apart, knees slightly bent, a dumbbell in each hand directly in front of your thighs, palms facing your body
- Tighten your core and press your hips backward as your torso hinges forward from the hips. Your torso should remain straight throughout the exercise (don’t hunch forward or bend at the waist).
- As your torso leans forward, allow the dumbbells to “shave” the front of your legs as your arms hang naturally from your shoulders
- When you feel your hamstrings tighten, stop the forward lean — only go as far as your natural flexibility allows you to go. From this position, row the dumbbells up to your chest by pulling your shoulder blades together and bending your elbows.
- Reverse the movement and steadily lower the dumbbells
- To return to the starting position, tighten your hamstrings and glutes and use your lower body to “pull” your torso back to standing. This movement should not originate from your low back or core.
- Continue the exercise
Related article: 5 Plank Variations For A Well Defined Six-Pack, Carve Your Core And Get Stronger
Around-the-world plank
Planks are pretty much the perfect exercise for developing core strength, and the around-the-world plank variation ramps up the intensity by requiring greater core engagement, particularly of the stabilizing muscles of the shoulders and hips. You can do this exercise on your toes or your knees, in a high-plank or low-plank position.
How to:
- Set up in a high- or low-plank position, either by balancing on your forearms and toes or your palms and your toes. Either way, check to make sure your palms or elbows are directly under your shoulders and that your body forms a straight line from heels to head. Don’t allow your hips to sag or creep up toward the sky.
- From your plank, lift one arm from the ground and reach it out as far as you can to the side, tapping the ground before returning it to its starting position
- Now lift one foot from the ground, reaching it out as far as you can to the side, tapping the ground before returning it to its starting position
- Repeat the lift-reach-tap-return motion with your other foot and arm, and continue the exercise
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