Exercise Database
core Exercises
Explore core exercises that improve trunk stability, flexion strength, and control during lifting, running, and everyday movement.
Equipment
cable twist
crunches arm straight
side plank
plank
crunches
hanging deadbug
dumbbell straight leg twist
ab-wheel rollout
frog crunch
machine seated crunch
leg raise hip lift with head up
dumbbell swing
barbell overhead lunge
hollow hold
burpee
sit-up
bird dog
decline crunch
russian twist
farmers walk
roman-chair sit-up
hanging straight leg raise
cable kneeling crunch
Overview
What to know before you pick a core exercise
Good core training is about more than chasing ab burn. A stronger trunk helps you transfer force, stay stable under load, and keep your position cleaner during presses, pulls, squats, and carries.
This collection is useful when you want to train the midsection through multiple jobs: resisting extension, rotating under control, and creating better tension between the ribcage and pelvis.
Selection Guide
How to choose the right option from this collection
Match the drill to the goal
Use planks and anti-movement patterns for bracing, and use raises or crunch variations when you want more direct abdominal tension.
Choose what you can own
The best core exercises let you keep the ribs down and pelvis controlled. If your position falls apart, regress before adding load.
Do not force complexity
Many lifters get better results from simple, repeatable core patterns than from flashy variations they cannot stabilize.
Programming Notes
How to program core work without guesswork
Use core work as glue
Two or three exercises per week is enough for most programs when the drills fill a purpose that your big lifts do not cover well.
Keep sets crisp
Stop when you lose position. Core work is far more useful when every rep reinforces control instead of reinforcing compensation.
Pair it with large lifts
Core accessories work well after squats, presses, deadlifts, or conditioning because they help finish the session without huge systemic fatigue.
Mistakes
Common core training mistakes
- •Arching the lower back to make the movement look bigger.
- •Treating every ab exercise like a race instead of a tension drill.
- •Choosing advanced variations before basic bracing is solid.
FAQ
Questions people ask about core exercises
How often should you train core?
Two to four short exposures per week is usually enough when the exercises are purposeful and you are already doing compound lifting.
Do compounds train the core enough?
Compounds help a lot, but direct core work still adds value when you need better bracing endurance, flexion strength, or positional control.
Should core work be heavy or high rep?
Both can work. Bracing drills often respond well to time or moderate reps, while direct ab work can use higher-rep sets with clean mechanics.
What is the best beginner core exercise?
Start with drills that teach you to keep the ribs stacked and the pelvis stable, then build toward harder lever positions over time.