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What Are The Best Ab Exercises?


Among all the muscles in our body, abs tend to be the superstar when we choose which group to focus on the most. After all, who has ever said that they’d prefer not to have a six-pack? It seems like there are a million and one gadgets and machines that are supposed to “work your abs.” But do you really need one?

There are enough effective exercises to give your abs a super workout without using anything more than your own body, although some extras, like stability balls or bars, can help you advance the intensity as you progress through your workout. We rounded up the best ab exercises that our experts feel are the best to specifically focus on the abs. You might not love how your abs feel immediately after giving these a first try, but you’ll definitely love how they look if you stick with these exercises.

Best Ab Exercises #1 | Stability Exercises

The function of the abs is to stabilize the spine, so the best way to strengthen them is through total body movements and stability exercises. My clients can attest—my favorite core exercises are forearm planks and side planks, and there are numerous variations so they never get old.

 

Starting with the basics, hold plank on your forearms and toes for 30 seconds keeping your body in a straight line from head to heels. Rest and then do it again. Once you’ve mastered the basics, you can do a plank using a bosu or stability ball. You can lift and hold one leg or one arm off the ground. You can hold plank using a TRX, or you can walk your plank from side-to-side.

Kristin Rooke, CPT

Best Ab Exercises #2 | Hanging Abs Raise

I think ultimately the best exercise varies depending on a person’s fitness level. The following are my favorite exercises, but they are more advanced and are certainly not appropriate for beginners or those who don’t have a very strong foundation. For beginners see: Abs Progression.

 

My favorite all time is the advanced hanging abs raise gymnasts do. You hang from a pull-up bar and you curl your legs forward while they are completely straight so your ankles/feet come all the way up to the bar. This is a very advanced exercise, but it’s also incredibly effective. Other honorable mentions include the abs wheel, abdominal cable curl, bosu ball crunches (while doing a reverse crunch with one leg on the side you are crunching), and advanced variations of the plank abs exercise.

Marc Perry, CSCS, CPT

Best Ab Exercises #3 | Hanging Windshield Wipers

I almost never do any direct ab work as I feel if you’re doing deadlifts and front squats heavy enough, while maintaining your diet, you’ll have more than enough ammunition to see your abs. If I had to pick one direct ab exercise that I’ll throw into my own workouts, it’ll be hanging windshield wipers.

 

This is performed by holding onto a chin-up bar, bringing your legs up as high as you can so that they’re in front of your face and then going side to side like a “windshield wiper.” Other ab exercises I enjoy and that more people can typically do are landmine twists (which is a great anti-rotation movement), decline bench weighted sit-ups (with the weight over your head), Palloff presses and the ab wheel.

John Leyva, CSCS, CPT

Best Ab Exercises #4 | Heavy-Weighted Crunch

Ah, the age old question of what is the best exercise to target your 6-pack. I’m sure I am going to get a lot of hate mail for this one but that still stands to be a properly executed heavy-weighted crunch. No matter how I feel about the exercise in general it still recruits the largest amount of muscle fibers.

 

If you’re looking for something a little more healthy, close runners up would be ab-wheel rollouts, hanging leg raises and bodyweight chin-ups. Over the years, I have also found that heavy front squats and explosive exercises such as hardstyle kettlebell swings also do the trick quite nicely.

Anytime your body is off the ground, your core and stabilizing muscles kick on hardcore. Doing strict chin-ups or leg raises will target your abs like whoah. Just make sure you are keeping your core tight and preventing your body from swinging as much as possible.

If you have access to an ab-wheel, I recommend starting there. They are not only good for training your low back (anti-extension) muscles but destroy your rectus abdominis as well. Add 3-5 sets of 10-15 ab wheel rollouts to the end of your workout and you will not enjoy laughing or sneezing for a week. You’re welcome.

Stephen Bergeron, CSCS, CPT

Best Ab Exercises #5 | Plank

While 99% of six-packs are acquired by dieting and/or being skinny and not ab exercises per se, ab exercises are important for core strength and stability. Planks work most abdominal muscles, and an entire plank workout only takes a few minutes. To do a plank, basically only your toes and elbows touch the floor while your legs and back remain rigidly straight. Hold the position for as long as you can (? 30 seconds), rest for a few minutes, repeat 2 – 3 x and voila, you’ll be sore tomorrow.

 

William Lagakos, Ph.D.

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Diet is key to abs. I was doing crunches like a mofo and had nothing to show for it... And then I cut sugar and gluten out of my diet and it did more for my midsection than any exercise.



some people already have abs, but its just covered under a layer of fat. You can do as many ab workouts you can, the real trick is to getting rid of that fat covering it up.



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deskpro2k3 said:

some people already have abs, but its just covered under a layer of fat. You can do as many ab workouts you can, the real trick is to getting rid of that fat covering it up.

Wrong.  EVERYBODY has abs.  It is an important muscle that helps our spine and posture.  They are just hidden under a layer of fat like you said.  To have visible abs it's like 95% done in the kitchen.  Men's abs usually show up between 8-12% bodyfat while girls is like 14-18% i think.  Not sure if that is correct on the girls part.  I'll be posting one about body fat percentage soon.




       

JayWood2010 said:
deskpro2k3 said:

some people already have abs, but its just covered under a layer of fat. You can do as many ab workouts you can, the real trick is to getting rid of that fat covering it up.

Wrong.  EVERYBODY has abs.  It is an important muscle that helps our spine and posture.  They are just hidden under a layer of fat like you said.  To have visible abs it's like 95% done in the kitchen.  Men's abs usually show up between 8-12% bodyfat while girls is like 14-18% i think.  Not sure if that is correct on the girls part.  I'll be posting one about body fat percentage soon.

I've seen plenty of pictures of death camp inmates, and I can tell you that no they don't.



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pezus said:
JayWood2010 said:
deskpro2k3 said:

some people already have abs, but its just covered under a layer of fat. You can do as many ab workouts you can, the real trick is to getting rid of that fat covering it up.

Wrong.  EVERYBODY has abs.  It is an important muscle that helps our spine and posture.  They are just hidden under a layer of fat like you said.  To have visible abs it's like 95% done in the kitchen.  Men's abs usually show up between 8-12% bodyfat while girls is like 14-18% i think.  Not sure if that is correct on the girls part.  I'll be posting one about body fat percentage soon.

Lol, it's like saying "some people already have a biceps" lulz.

They're just covered under a layer of laziness.



pezus said:
LemonSlice said:
JayWood2010 said:
deskpro2k3 said:

some people already have abs, but its just covered under a layer of fat. You can do as many ab workouts you can, the real trick is to getting rid of that fat covering it up.

Wrong.  EVERYBODY has abs.  It is an important muscle that helps our spine and posture.  They are just hidden under a layer of fat like you said.  To have visible abs it's like 95% done in the kitchen.  Men's abs usually show up between 8-12% bodyfat while girls is like 14-18% i think.  Not sure if that is correct on the girls part.  I'll be posting one about body fat percentage soon.

I've seen plenty of pictures of death camp inmates, and I can tell you that no they don't.

Massively atrophied, but probably all have at least something there

I don't know why I read that as a "six pack", I guess I sounded like a bit of a fool.



deskpro2k3 said:

some people already have abs, but its just covered under a layer of fat. You can do as many ab workouts you can, the real trick is to getting rid of that fat covering it up.


Went ahead and posted it.  http://gamrconnect.vgchartz.com/thread.php?id=153222





       

Look at all those soccer mom exercises, weighted squats or bust.



Doesn't most of your body have muscle? For example everyone has muscle in their legs, arms, stomach, chest etc......?