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11 Push-Up Variations To Amp Up Your Fitness Quotient

There are 11 types of push-up variations.

Push-ups don’t come in a one-size-fits-all package. There are enough variants for you to be spoilt for choice! You can start off with simpler modified push-ups ideal for beginners and work your way up to push-ups that challenge your core more. If you’re in great shape already, some advanced and plyometric versions can help build power and pose more of a stability challenge into what was once just a basic push-up.

1. Standard/Classic Push-Ups

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The standard or classic push-up can really work your core as well as pectorals in the chest, shoulders, and arms. Get your technique right for the classic push-up by following these steps, taking care to maintain form and alignment so you don’t risk injury and properly use all your muscle groups:1

2. Wall Push-Ups

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For beginners or older adults/seniors, the wall push-up can be a good way to start. This variation of the push-up also works your chest, shoulders, and arms.2

3. Incline Bench/Chair Push-Ups

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An incline push-up can reduce the stress on the ligaments on your shoulder (anterior glenohumeral ligaments) and discomfort experienced in your wrist. Do this from a regular push-up position. If you cannot manage that, kneel down. The grip for the push-up can be adjusted so it is narrower and the decline movement is smaller, making it an easier variant. All you need is a standard weight bench in the gym or a stable flat bench or surface in the park or at home.3

Note: The bent knee push-up is used for beginners or those with less upper body or core strength who find the regular push-up challenging. They are sometimes also referred to as women’s push-ups or modified push-ups. However, there’s been some flak around how this is not a good simulation of or right build-up to the full push-up and doesn’t allow you to properly engage your glutes and spine or maintain the right form. Instead, the incline push-up is a better choice.

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4. Suspended Push-Ups

A suspended push-up is a more challenging version of the push-up that uses your abdominal as well as latissimus dorsi (lats) muscles to keep the stability of the movement. This is better suited for advanced workouts.4

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5. Medicine Ball Push-Ups On A Changing/Unstable Surface

A medicine ball push-up is good for those with an advanced level of skill and fitness. It engages your core to keep that stability needed for a push-up. Research has also found doing your push-up on a labile surface like a ball can significantly raise the levels of chest muscle and tricep activity compared to when you do a basic push-up on a stable surface.5

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According to one piece of research, it can activate your abdominal muscles 2.5 times more. However, for those prone to lower back problems, this is better avoided as it places greater load on the lumbar spine/lower back.6 The pressure it places on your wrists can be reduced by using an alternative ball that isn’t as hard on them.7:

6. Stability Ball Push-Ups Below The Leg

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This variant of the push-up may reduce load on the upper body since the ball bears some of the weight. It makes it a good push-up for those who are overweight or obese or are finding the classic push-up too difficult to perform.8:

You could also place the ball below your flexed feet and hands on the floor to change this into a challenging decline push-up. Alternatively, use a bench on which you keep your flexed foot and lower yourself down into a push-up with the help of this more stable surface.

7. Stability Ball Push-Ups Below The Stomach

This is an intermediate difficulty exercise that works the chest and shoulders. Here’s how you can do one with the ball below your stomach:9

You can squeeze the ball in your hands to help stabilize yourself. To make the push-up harder, keep your feet together behind you instead of hip-distance apart. Also, raise one foot off the ground as you lower yourself to make it more of a balance challenge.

8. One Arm/Single Arm Push-Ups

The single arm push-up is the hallmark of fitness and one you’ve probably seen ripped gym buffs perform with ease on fitness videos. This type of push-up is no walk in the park, but if you can get it right, it is a great workout that really pushes you and helps build strength. It also needs you to get your form and skill spot on, so take it one step at a time. Fitness experts suggest progressing from doing an elevated single arm push-up using a stable bench or box first, before moving to lower and lower elevations until you are able to do the standard push-up on one arm on the floor.

The steps for this form of push-up are exactly like with an incline push-up, with one difference – one arm is raised off the bench throughout, so your weight rests on the hand in contact with the bench/box. The other arm is tucked neatly behind your back. It requires you to engage your core to stabilize your body and is harder without the balance from the second hand.

9. Diamond Or Triangle Push-Ups

Another challenging push-up option, the diamond or triangle push-up can be done by beginners in a kneeling position. However, for best results this needs to be done in a standard push-up position with legs extended fully behind you, balancing on your feet with toes flexed. At first, you may not be able to lower yourself all the way to the ground, so slowly work your way to the point where you can let your nose graze the floor in the lower position.

When you do this push-up, everything else remains the same as a standard push-up. Just change the way your hands are positioned.10 Keep your hands in front of you to create a diamond/triangle shape. Your index fingers and thumbs of both hands should touch each other. By doing this, you use your inner chest muscles as well as triceps more during the push-up.

10. Clap Push-Ups

In clap push-ups, you introduce a clap as you push yourself off the ground. This makes it a more explosive movement and is good for those looking for a plyometric push-up variation. Athletes who are involved in sports needing fast or explosive movements (sports that involve throwing movements like basketball, volleyball, or even tennis) will benefit from this, though anyone looking to up the challenge on a push-up will also enjoy this version.11

11. T Push-Ups

The T push-up incorporates a modification to the upward movement that can strengthen your shoulders and open up the back during the outward movement. The T push-up can be made more challenging with the use of two dumbells – one in each hand, as you perform the movement, for added resistance. Here’s how you do one:12

References[+]

References
1 Push-up. American Council on Exercise.
2 Wall Push Up. Go4Life, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
3 Durall, Chris J., Robert C. Manske, and George J. Davies. “Avoiding shoulder injury from resistance training.” Strength & Conditioning Journal 23, no. 5 (2001): 10.
4 TRX ® Suspended Push-up. American Council on Exercise.
5 Sandhu, Jaspal S., Shruti Mahajan, and Shweta Shenoy. “An electromyographic analysis of shoulder muscle activation during push-up variations on stable and labile surfaces.” International journal of shoulder surgery 2, no. 2 (2008): 30.
6 Beach, Tyson AC, Samuel J. Howarth, and Jack P. Callaghan. “Muscular contribution to low-back loading and stiffness during standard and suspended push-ups.” Human Movement Science 27, no. 3 (2008): 457-472.
7 Medicine Ball Push-ups. American Council on Exercise.
8 Exercise Progressions for Clients Who Are Overweight or Are Affected by Obesity. American Council on Exercise.
9 Stability Ball Push Up. American Council on Exercise.
10 Diamond push up. Women’s Health And Fitness Magazine.
11 Moore, Laura H., MICHAEL J. TANKOVICH, BRYAN L. RIEMANN, and GEORGE J. DAVIES. “Kinematic analysis of four plyometric push-up variations.” International journal of exercise science 5, no. 4 (2012): 334.
12 Adam Bornstein, Editors of Men’s Health. The Men’s Health Big Book: Getting Abs: Four Weeks To A Flat, Ripped Stomach. Rodale, 2003.
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