Because of the kettlebell’s shape, you can push, pull, and swing it like nothing else, and unlock a new branch of exercises that are pretty much impossible without it.
Follow these six kettlebell exercises to add more muscle, melt more fat, boost your endurance, and move better. You’ll improve your body quickly and build the foundation for every other kettlebell exercise. (Biceps curls, however, are forbidden—at least for this workout they are.)
Put all six of the following exercises together for one badass complex:
- KB Swing x 8
- KB Snatch x 8
- KB Clean x 8
- KB Push Press x 8
- KB Windmill x 8
- KB Goblet Squat x 8
Finish all your reps for each exercise and go straight into the next exercise without resting or resting the kettlebell.
Kettlebells start here. The deadlift adds muscle to your hips, hamstrings, glutes, and back. It also ingrains a good hip-hinge—the process of bending forward at your hips while keeping your lower-back flat and bending your knees slightly—necessary in almost every kettlebell move.
How to do it:
Stand feet shoulder-width apart with the kettlebell between your legs and the handle inline with the bony part of your ankles. Bend from hips, and grab the kettlebell with both hands. Before you lift, your shins
The kettlebell swing is a fantastic exercise to strengthen your body and burn a ton of fat. It develops tremendous power in your hamstrings, glutes, and core, which will improve your other lifts like the squat and deadlift. It also crushes your lungs and blasts your metabolism because it repeats so quickly.
Adding the swing to your workout will absolutely improve your athleticism. It is, however, one of the most butchered exercises on Earth. Start with the kettlebell deadlift first—it will build a great foundation and teach good technique.
How to do it:
Start in a deadlift position with the kettlebell a few feet in front of you. Then, hike the kettlebell back between your legs like a center in football and explosively drive your hips forward. Imagine propelling the kettlebell to a target in front of you.
Here are the two most common problems you’ll encounter:
1. “Squatting” the kettlebell swing. At the bottom of the swing, your torso is too upright and your knees are too far forward: It looks like a squat. This happens because you haven’t mastered the deadlift yet.
Work on your kettlebell deadlift, and then retry the swing. Only bend your knees slightly.
2. Too much arms. Your arms should feel like noodles because it’s the hips that propel the movement. Instead, use a towel swing: wrap a towel around the kettlebell handle and grab the ends of the towel. Then, swing the kettlebell.
With a correct swing, the kettlebell should reach around the height of your belly button or chest, no higher.
How to use it:
Use it as a power exercise early in your workout or at the end as a brutal finisher.
The push press is a phenomenal, explosive move that sculpts big shoulders, huge traps, and ripped triceps. It also builds tremendous core stability and forces you to generate power from your lower body, transfer it up the kinetic chain, and out through your arms, which is integral in every sport.
How to do it:
Start with the kettlebells in the “rack position”—hold the kettlebells at your chest with the kettlebell on the outside of your arms and your hands underneath your chin. Keep your chest up, pull shoulders back, and crush your armpits. Keep your wrists straight.
Lower yourself into a very partial squat and explode upward with your legs while driving your arms overhead. At the top, make sure your biceps are next to your ears and your wrists are flat, not bent backward. Carefully lower the kettlebells back to the rack position and repeat.
How to use it:
Use it as a power exercise early in your workout or as a shoulder exercise in your upper-body workouts.
The kettlebell clean is a power exercise that swings the kettlebell to the rack position. You build both explosive strength and coordination. It’s also a safe and efficient way to bring the kettlebell to the rack position for your overhead exercises.
How to do it:
Start in a deadlift position with the kettlebell a few feet in front of you. Then, hike the kettlebell back between your legs like a center in football and explosively drive your hips forward. Swing the kettlebell up to the rack position. Then repeat.
The kettlebell snatch is a power exercise that swings the kettlebell to an overhead position, like at the top of the push press. Because it travels more distance, the snatch builds more power than the swing or clean.
How to do it:
Start in a deadlift position with the kettlebell a few feet in front of you. Then, hike the kettlebell back between your legs like a center in football and explosively drive your hips forward. Swing the kettlebell up to an overhead position like with the push press—imagine zipping up your jacket as you pull the kettlebell overhead. Drop the kettlebell back between your legs and repeat.
The most common problem with the snatch is when the kettlebell slams on your forearm at the top. Don’t whip the kettlebell around your hand; whip your hand around the kettlebell.
How to use it:
Use it as a power exercise early in your workout or at the end as a brutal finisher.
This is a phenomenal dynamic exercise that blasts your obliques, strengthens your shoulders, and activates your hips too.
How to do it:
Hold one kettlebell overhead and stand with your feet shoulder-width apart and toes pointed away from the kettlebell. Bend at your hip and lower your torso to the side. Keep the kettlebell over your shoulder and your lower back flat. Use the back of your bottom hand to trace your forward leg. Keep the back leg straight and watch the kettlebell throughout.
How to use it:
Use it early in your workout to light up your core, warm up your joints, and increase your flexibility.
BY ANTHONY J. YEUNG, CSCS