NASM Personal Trainer, NASM Fitness Nutrition Specialist, ACE Sports Conditioning Specialist, NASM Performance Enhancement Specialist
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Although gym equipment like dumbbells, barbells, and kettlebells certainly help sculpt muscle, building your back can be done using your body weight alone.
Below, we discuss how you can build back muscles without weights. We’ll also cover how to achieve progressive overload (the process of building muscle) without packing on the load.
Best of all, we’ll provide you with the best back exercises without weights.
So, if your gym goals include building muscle definition and strengthening the muscles in your back, try these 8 back exercises without weights.
Bodyweight exercise is also known as calisthenics. Examples include squats, push-ups, pull-ups, and other compound exercises — multi-joint, multi-muscle moves — that rely on you moving with your own body weight.
Calisthenics is also an umbrella term spanning beginners’ bodyweight exercise to advanced gymnastics, found within functional workouts and CrossFit classes. That means advanced moves like handstands and muscle-ups can be calisthenics.
Although bodyweight training builds functional strength, you could also build back muscle with no equipment, especially as a beginner. And it’s a great way to sculpt a stronger body without heavy weightlifting. [1]
Anyone can do it, and you can make it as low-impact as necessary, but if your goal is to build leaner back muscles, you’ll need to adopt a principle called progressive overload, which we dissect later on.
You can do these 8 back exercises without weights at home. Here’s a step-by-step on how to do them.
Remember to move slowly and with control. Squeeze your glutes, back, and shoulder muscles at the top of the exercise and avoid turning toward one side.
Supermans use a back extension to hit the back muscles hard, including the shoulders (the posterior deltoids). Draw your shoulder blades together as you lift and move with control. Practice lifting just your arms or legs first until you feel comfortable.
Engage your core throughout the movement to protect your lower back and ensure optimal muscle activation.
Maintain a steady breathing pattern, exhaling as you lift and inhaling as you lower, to enhance stability and muscle engagement.
Focus on maintaining a smooth, controlled motion to maximize oblique engagement and improve trunk mobility.
Avoid overextending or flexing the spine and work to your end range of motion. You can determine this by your hamstring flexibility.
Use a slight gaze point a few feet ahead on the floor to aid balance and ensure a steady, controlled movement.
Press firmly through your heels during the lift to maximize glute activation and ensure proper form.
Progressive overload is an important principle to achieving hypertrophy (muscle-building) and simply means consistently changing variables like load, sets, reps, timing, or frequency to keep muscles suitably challenged. That’s how they adapt and grow.
During a back workout without weights, you won’t be able to adapt load (weight), so use these four techniques instead.
Find ways to make exercise harder. For example, you could adopt one-legged variations or add pulses to any of the exercises above.
Increase the reps or sets of your given exercises. If you perform these back exercises without weights as a circuit, increase the time you work for or reduce rest periods between exercises or sets.
For example, 3-4 sets could become 4-5 sets, 8-10 reps could increase to 10-12 reps, or working sets could switch from 40 seconds on and 15 seconds off to 45 seconds on and 10 seconds off. [2]
If you start with no weight back exercises once or twice a week, consider increasing to three or four workouts per week. This will depend on your fitness level and goals and whether or not you have any current injuries. Always remember to schedule recovery between workouts to avoid overtraining.
TUT (Time Under Tension) is a strength training concept that refers to the amount of time in seconds that a muscle is under strain during a set.
In programming, the tempo is listed as four beats. For example, 3-1-3-1. During a squat, that means the following:
Consider slowing your exercises down. You could lower and lift for four seconds during your single-leg deadlifts or good mornings to test balance and coordination.
Slowing back exercises without weights hold muscles under tension for longer, helping increase strength and muscle. [3]
This article is intended for general informational purposes only and does not address individual circumstances. It is not a substitute for professional advice or help and should not be relied on to make decisions of any kind. Any action you take upon the information presented in this article is strictly at your own risk and responsibility!