How To Get A Flat Stomach Workout
Okay, so in your pursuit of finding the best tummy exercises for a flat stomach, you've trawled the internet, performed 100 half-hearted bicycle crunches, googled the hell out of flat stomach workouts and "how to tone my stomach", and done quite a lot of creeping of Pilates instructors on Instagram. We get it.
But, and we hope this doesn't come as a surprise, that's not the most effective way to sculpt a strong core. Shocking, we know.
In fact, whilst knowing which are the best stomach exercises to build core strength and chisel a toned tummy are important, also being aware of the other factors impacting how visible those muscles are (e.g. how long it takes to get abs), and the safety measures to take into account are equally as crucial too.
So, if you're ready for a 101 on building a solid, strong core, strap in.
What muscles make up the core?
- Pelvic floor muscles: functions to support organs such as the bladder, uterus and intestines.
- Transverse abdominis and Rectus abdominis: often referred to as the 'six-pack' muscles, they are crucial for functional movement (hinging, bending, twisting) and stability.
- I nternal and external obliques: supports respiration and trunk rotation.
- Erector spinae: strengthens your back and provides a stable foundation for rotations.
'The core isn't one muscle; it's a relationship between a number of muscles that cover your whole trunk, connecting your hips, spine, neck and shoulders,' explains performance coach Brett Klika. 'The rectus abdominis, or "six-pack" muscles, are only part of it.'
What Klika means is that those half-hearted bicycle crunches and other stomach exercises, stomach workouts and belly workouts you've been doing before bed are actually leaving much of your core out of the picture. Not to mention they're potentially slowing down your progress, as well as being an unsafe way to train.
Aim for variety in your exercise and strength gains will follow. Trust us.
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Why is a strong core so important?
Obviously, it pays to look beyond aesthetics when building up core strength – it's also a crucial factor in maintaining good overall health and mobility of your body. 'Some of the strongest people in the world don't have six-packs, but they can lift a lot or perform tremendous feats of athleticism,' describes Klika.
A strong core is a major factor in staying free from injury – particularly in the hips and knees, says Michelle Arent, director of training and conditioning at Rutgers Center for Health and Human Performance in the US.
However, and this is important, the core is more than the muscles running alongside the front of your stomach. In fact, the core itself is a 3-dimensional 'box' shape that includes:
- Your abdominals
- Your glutes
- Your lower back muscles
So, when we talk about building a strong core, we're actually talking about building a strong 'trunk'. Capice?
We've collated a mega list of both bodyweight and weighted stomach exercise for women... keep scrolling for the best tummy exercises with weights
Best stomach exercises and belly exercises without equipment
Now, believe us when we say there's not a holy grail "exercise for a flat tummy" and anyone who tells you there is, is leading you up Nonsense Creek.
What there actually is, are multiple stomach exercises that work your core across multiple planes (the ways in which your abs move).
Try adding the following exercises onto the end of a lower-body workout or, if you're after a core-based session, compile them into the stomach workout of your wildest dreams. Dealer's choice.
1. Scissor legs
a) Lie flat with your legs together and arms by your sides (don't get too comfy) then roll your legs overhead until you can place your palms flat against the back of your lower back
b) Balance evenly on the backs of your shoulders and reach your right leg forward on a high diagonal and left leg back in opposition without lowering then roll back down and repeat on the other side.
2. Straight-legged sit-up
a) Lie on your back and put your hands behind your head. Engage your core by breathing in.
b) Slowly lift your upper body off the floor until you reach upright. Return to laying and repeat.
3. Suitcase sit-ups
a) Lay back on your mat with your knees at a 90-degree angle off of the floor and hands placed either side of your ears.
b) Extend your legs out straight as you lower your upper body to the floor, then crunch them back in again, bringing your knees towards your chest.
4. Supine leg circles
a) Lie flat on the mat with arms by your side.
b) Lift your legs up to 90 degrees and, using your abdominal muscles, perform slow, controlled circles.
5. V-sit hold
a) Sit up straight with your knees bent, feet on the floor and arms extended in front.
b) Lean back and extend your legs up so your body creates a V-hold. Hold. And yep, hold some more...
6. Crunch
a) Lie on your back, knees bent and feet tucked under a weight (or get your PT boyfriend to stand on them), stretching your arms out in front.
b) Using your core to lift you, reach for your knees with a short, swift movement – lifting only your head, shoulders and upper back off the floor. Reverse and repeat, feeling the burn in your upper abs.
7. Bicycle crunch
a) Lie down with your head and shoulders raised, hands behind your head and legs in a tabletop position.
b) Bring your right elbow to meet your left knee while straightening your right leg at a 45-degree angle.
8. Reverse crunch
a) Lay flat on your back with your legs bent and hinge your knees towards your torso.
b) Bring your legs back down to straight without dropping your feet to the floor.
9. Dead bug
a) Lie on your back with your arms above your shoulders and legs in a tabletop position.
b) Keeping your arms straight, stable and strong, alternate lowering and lifting each leg, ensuring your lower back remains melted into the floor.
10. Jackknife
a) Lie face up legs extended and lifted off of the ground and arms stretched out behind you.
b) Crunch your legs towards your chest and bring your arms forward to travel past your feet.
c) Lower back and repeat.
11. Bear crawl
a) Begin in a wide push-up position then, keeping the distance between your hands and feet, walk your left hand and right foot forward at the same time. A bit confusing, we know.
b) Do the same with your right hand and left foot. Growl.
12. Plank reach
a) Starting in the forearm plank position raise and straighten your right arm, and hold it so that it's parallel to the rest of your body.
b) Lower to the starting position, then repeat with the other arm raised.
13. Forearm plank
a) From a push-up position, bend elbows and rest your weight on your forearms.
b) Keeping your body in a straight line, brace your core and hold for 30 seconds. That's one set.
14. High plank
a) Get into a high plank position with your hands directly under your shoulders, core braced, bum tight and feet together.
b) Hold.
15. Rocking high plank
a) Get into a plank position with your hands on the floor.
a) From the plank, rock your body weight forward into your core whilst keeping your muscles stable and strong. Slide back to your starting position and repeat.
16. Side plank
a) Lean on the right side of your body in a straight line from your head to your feet, with your arms bent and your elbow directly beneath your shoulders.
b) Hold for 30 seconds and repeat on the left.
17. Plank jacks
a) Get into a high plank position with your feet together. Keeping your hands firmly on the floor jump your feet out to each side.
b) Jump feet back in. That's one rep. Repeat.
18. Thread the needle
a) Lie in a side plank position with your arm extended to the ceiling.
b) Lower your arm, 'threading' through below your hip and extend back up. Keep your hips up and high!
19. Russian twist
a) Lie on your back, knees raised and bent at 45° with feet hovering just off the floor. Use your abs to raise your torso to a 45° angle with the floor.
b) Slowly twist your torso to the right side, keeping your arms straight and raised. Pause and then reverse the twist to repeat on the left side. That's one rep.
20. Bird dog
a) Get into a tabletop position on the floor on your hands and knees, tuck your bum under and engage your core. Raise your right arm until it's next to your ear while simultaneously lifting your left leg until it's parallel with the floor.
b) Return to the starting position and repeat with the left arm and right leg. That's one rep. Keeping your core tight will stop you from falling to one side.
21. Commando plank
a) Begin in a high plank with your core engaged and your feet hip-width apart. Hold for 30 seconds. Keep your spine neutral.
b) Keeping your core engaged, lower your left forearm to the floor, then your right so you're in a forearm plank.
c) With your back flat, push through each arm to return to a high plank. Repeat for 15 seconds, finishing in a high plank.
22. Boat tucks
a) From sitting, rock onto your sitting bones, leaning back with your torso and legs outstretched.
b) From here, use your core muscles to bring your upper body to almost upright and draw your legs towards your chest. Repeat.
23. Flutter kicks
a) Begin lying flat on your back on a mat, palms face-down underneath your glutes. Core engaged, raise both your legs in a straight line until they're hovering above the floor.
b) Keeping your abs braced and legs straight, rapidly kick your legs – right and left alternately – up and down, stopping just above the floor each time. Make sure that your lower back doesn't lift off the floor at any point.
24. Leg raises
a) Lie flat on the floor on your back, with your hands on either side of your body and your palms facing down. Engage your core, then raise your feet towards the ceiling.
b) Core still engaged, gently lower your legs (keeping them straight) as low as you can while keeping your lower back pressed into the floor. Repeat.
25. Sit-up
a) Lie down on your back. Bend your legs and place your feet firmly on the ground to stabilise your lower body. Cross your hands to opposite shoulders over your chest or place them behind your ears, without pulling on your neck.
b) Curl your upper body all the way up toward your knees. Exhale as you lift.
c) Slowly, lower yourself down, returning to your starting point. Inhale as you lower.
26. Heel reaches
a) Lay flat on your back with knees bent and feet on the mat. Lift your head and shoulders off the mat and extend your hands towards your heels.
b) Using your core, 'squirm' from side to side, tapping your left heel with your left hand and right heel with your right hand.
Best tummy exercises with weights
Again, there's no one best stomach exercise – there are many that will challenge your core in different ways. If you're comfortable performing abdominal exercises without weight, think about levelling up to using a weight, like a dumbbell or kettlebell.
27. Side bend
a) Stand with feet shoulder-width apart, a dumbbell in each hand.
b) Keeping your core engaged, bend to the left, feeling your waist contract.
c) Come back to your starting position, using your core to raise your body up.
d) Repeat on the other side.
28. Sit up with chest press
a) Lie down on your back. Bend your legs and place your feet firmly on the ground to stabilise your lower body. Hold a dumbbell with both hands.
b) Curl your upper body all the way up toward your knees. Exhale as you lift.
c) As you curl up, press the dumbbell out directly in front of you to form a right angle between your arms and body.
d) Slowly, lower yourself down, returning your arms and body to your starting point. Inhale as you lower.
29. Sit up with overhead press
a) Lie down on your back. Bend your legs and place your feet firmly on the ground to stabilise your lower body. Hold a dumbbell with both hands.
b) Curl your upper body all the way up toward your knees. Exhale as you lift.
c) As you curl up, press the dumbbell out directly above you, keeping a soft bend in your elbows.
d) Slowly, lower yourself down, returning your arms and body to your starting point. Inhale as you lower.
30. Weighted sit up
a) Lie down on your back. Bend your legs and place your feet firmly on the ground to stabilise your lower body. Hold one weight at either end and extend arms behind your head, with a slight bend in the elbow.
b) Curl your upper body all the way up toward your knees, bringing your arms to rest comfortably in front of you. Exhale as you lift.
c) Slowly, lower yourself down, returning to your starting point. Inhale as you lower.
31. Weighted Russian twists
a) Lie on your back, knees raised and bent at 45° with feet hovering just off the floor and both hands holding the weight above your chest. Use your abs to raise your torso to a 45° angle with the floor.
b) Slowly twist your torso to the right side, keeping your arms straight and raised. Pause and then reverse the twist to repeat on the left side. That's one rep.
32. Weighted modified Russian twist
a) Lie on your back with your feet on the floor and both hands holding the weight above your chest. (You can use a kettlebell, a medicine ball or a dumbbell for this exercise.) Use your abs to raise your torso to a 45° angle with the floor.
b) Slowly twist your torso to the right side, keeping your arms straight and raised. Pause and then reverse the twist to repeat on the left side. That's one rep.
33. Weighted straight leg sit up
a) Lie down on your back with your legs extended straight out in front of you. Hold a kettlebell or dumbbell with both hands, behind your head.
b) Curl your upper body all the way up toward your knees. Exhale as you lift.
c) As you curl up, pull the weight over your head to finish in front of your chest, keeping a soft bend in your elbows.
d) Slowly, lower yourself down, returning your arms and body to your starting point. Inhale as you lower.
34. Lateral pulls
a) Place a kettlebell or dumbbell near your hands ad get into a high plank position, with both hands flat on the floor.
b) Engage your core and pull the weight through your arms with your opposite hand, keeping your hips stable. That's one rep.
c) Now, pull the weight back to its starting position, using the opposite hand to where it's landed.
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Answering your flat stomach FAQs
Here's the 411 on the best way to tone your stomach, along with tons of resources to make hitting your goals that bit more efficiently. (Don't worry, you won't find any suspect flat tummy workouts here!)
I'm a beginner: What are the best stomach exercises for a beginner?
If this is the first time you're focusing on abdominal exercises, you should gradually increase the intensity of the movements you do. Basically, you shouldn't be attempting any single-arm plank variations if you're falling to your knees within 10 seconds when doing a standard plank.
If the move is too difficult or advanced for you, the chances are that your body will overcompensate elsewhere and throw your form off. Not good.
Instead, try and get to grips with these basic moves before progressing onto the trickier exercises:
- Dead bugs
- High plank – with knees on the floor
- Forearm plank – with knees on the floor
What exercise burns the most belly fat?
Let's get one thing straight, right away. You can't spot reduce belly fat – when you lose body fat, you'll lose it from all over, not one specific place. Similarly, no one exercise is going to torch belly fat specifically. Your diet, stress levels and sleep play just as (if not more) important role in your body being able to effectively lose fat.
Regular movement, including these exercises, will keep your body strong, build muscle and burn calories – all-important building blocks in losing fat. The old adage is true though: you can't out-exercise a bad diet, so be mindful about how you're fuelling your fat loss too.
Tarik Belalij, personal trainer and nutritionist at Everyone Active Leisure Centre suggests focusing on the following food groups:
- Nutrient-rich vegetables: kale, spinach, collard greens
- Lean protein: turkey, chicken or tofu
- Unprocessed carbohydrates: potatoes, bananas, rice and quinoa
How can I get a flat stomach or make my stomach flatter?
First off, if you're looking to make strength gains you probably don't want a flat stomach. Strong abdominals – if your body fat is low enough – have a natural muscular look.
However, and this is an important point to make – strengthening your stomach muscles alone won't help you achieve the strong and lean aesthetic you're after.
That comes down to lowering your body fat percentage to a point where abdominal muscles are visible – that's between 14 –24% for women. However, common thinking suggests that most women should not dip below 18% body fat, at the risk of interfering with their hormones.
Also, if abs come at the cost of your mental health or you find yourself feeling preoccupied with fat loss, take a step back and perhaps ease off for a little while. Fuelling your body well with regular exercise, enough sleep and minimising stress is far more important than any body fat percentile. Trust us.
If I'm trying to lose body fat, what else should I do besides belly exercises?
Learning how to tone your stomach is one thing (although, in technical speak, you're actually learning how to do core exercises with good form) but trying to lose body fat to make your stomach look leaner is another.
Firstly, there are multiple elements to losing belly fat and none of them has anything to do with crash dieting or unsafe eating protocols. Instead, calculating a safe calorie deficit that supports your lifestyle (this can be anywhere between 200 and 500 calories below how many calories your body needs for maintenance) is the key to safe and sustainable fat loss.
Creating a calorie deficit through your diet is much more reliable than trying to create the same gap with exercise. Use our calorie deficit calculator to find out what that is for you (it's different for everyone so no peaking at each other's answers):
Tailoring your nutrition is one prong to losing weight well but regular strength training to maintain muscle mass and keeping your NEAT exercise high are two other important factors not to sleep on either.
If you're not in the know, NEAT exercise (Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis) makes up more of your total daily energy expenditure (aka how many calories you burn) than your gym workout or home workout. This means making sure you keep your daily movement high throughout the day instead of just when you're getting on your exercise mat or on the treadmill is crucially important.
Forms of NEAT exercise include doing household chores, walking your dog, playing with your kids, strolling around the park with a podcast or choosing to take the stairs instead of the elevator or escalator. It's basically anything you do that doesn't count as demarcated exercise.
Along with more movement, keeping a regular resistance training routine will ensure you maintain muscle mass while you continue to lose weight. Muscle tissue is more metabolically active than fat tissue which means the more muscle you have on your body the more calories you burn at rest (read: without doing anything).
Brush up on these strength training benefits if you're looking for some motivation or commit to Alice Liveing's 28-day back-to-basics strength training plan. Here's a sneak peek of the entire four-week plan:
I've just had a baby, can I do these exercises?
Getting back into exercise post-pregnancy is something that has to be done with hyper-attention to the safety of you and your postpartum body. Before you try anything, you must get permission from your doctor. That's a non-negosh, OK?
Once you've got the doctor all-clear, PT and postpartum specialist Charlie Launder suggest keeping the following five things front of mind as you jump back in:
- Ensure your trainer is qualified in pre and post-natal training
- Listen to your body
- Make time for rest and recovery
- Get a post-natal physio check-up
- Be confident to say 'no' if an exercise doesn't feel right for you
For more of Launder's expertise as well as a plethora of post-natal workout wisdom, check out our full post-pregnancy workout guide.
Morgan Fargo Morgan is WH's digital fitness writer with a penchant for brutal HIIT classes and thick post-workout smoothies.
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How To Get A Flat Stomach Workout
Source: https://www.womenshealthmag.com/uk/fitness/strength-training/a706942/tummy-exercises-for-a-flat-stomach/
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