Plank Lateral Raise

Plank Lateral Raise: Core Stability, Shoulder Control & Form Guide

Learn the Plank Lateral Raise for core stability, shoulder strength, anti-rotation control, proper form, sets, tips, FAQs, and equipment.

Plank Lateral Raise: Core Stability, Shoulder Control & Form Guide
Core Stability

Plank Lateral Raise

Intermediate Bodyweight Core / Shoulders / Anti-Rotation
The Plank Lateral Raise is a bodyweight core and shoulder stability exercise performed from a high plank position. During the movement, one arm lifts out to the side while the opposite arm supports the body. As a result, the exercise challenges the core, shoulders, and hip stabilizers to keep the torso controlled. The goal is not to rush the arm raise. Instead, move with control, keep the hips steady, and return each hand to the floor without losing plank alignment.

This exercise works best when the body stays long, braced, and quiet. Although the arm is moving, the main challenge is resisting unwanted rotation through the trunk. Therefore, each repetition should feel like a controlled balance drill rather than a fast shoulder swing. Keep the feet slightly apart, press firmly through the supporting hand, and raise the free arm only as high as you can while keeping the hips level.

Safety tip: Stop the set if your lower back sags, your shoulder feels sharp pain, or your hips twist heavily from side to side. Reduce the range of motion, slow the tempo, or practice a regular high plank first.

Quick Overview

Body Part Core
Primary Muscle Core stabilizers, especially the rectus abdominis, transverse abdominis, and obliques
Secondary Muscle Shoulders, chest, triceps, glutes, hip stabilizers, and upper-back stabilizers
Equipment No equipment required
Difficulty Intermediate because it requires plank strength, shoulder control, and anti-rotation stability

Sets & Reps (By Goal)

  • Core stability: 2–4 sets × 6–10 reps per side with a slow, controlled tempo
  • Shoulder control: 3 sets × 8–12 reps per side, keeping the arm raise smooth and steady
  • Warm-up activation: 1–2 sets × 5–8 reps per side before upper-body or core training
  • Muscular endurance: 2–3 sets × 10–14 total alternating reps while maintaining clean form

Progression rule: First improve stability and tempo. Then add reps. If your hips rotate heavily, reduce the range or widen your feet before increasing difficulty.

Setup / Starting Position

  1. Start in a high plank: Place both hands on the floor under your shoulders with your arms straight.
  2. Set your feet: Keep the feet slightly apart to create a stable base before lifting one arm.
  3. Brace your core: Pull the ribs down slightly and keep your body in a straight line from head to heels.
  4. Set your neck: Keep the head neutral and look down toward the floor instead of lifting the chin.
  5. Press the floor away: Push firmly through both hands so the shoulders stay active before the first rep.

Tip: A wider foot stance makes the exercise easier. A narrower stance makes the anti-rotation demand much harder.

Execution (Step-by-Step)

  1. Shift with control: Slightly transfer weight into one supporting hand without letting the hips drop.
  2. Lift one arm sideways: Raise the opposite arm out to the side until it reaches about shoulder height, if control allows.
  3. Keep the torso steady: Brace the abs and glutes so the body does not twist open excessively.
  4. Pause briefly: Hold the top position for a short moment while keeping the supporting shoulder strong.
  5. Return the hand slowly: Lower the raised arm back to the floor with control rather than dropping it.
  6. Reset your plank: Re-balance through both hands before repeating on the other side.
Form checkpoint: The arm should move, but the torso should stay as still as possible. If the movement turns into a big body twist, the rep is too difficult for your current control level.

Pro Tips & Common Mistakes

  • Move slowly: A controlled raise builds more stability than a fast, swinging arm motion.
  • Keep the hips level: Avoid rotating the pelvis every time the arm leaves the floor.
  • Do not sag the lower back: Brace the abs and squeeze the glutes to keep the plank line strong.
  • Press through the supporting hand: This keeps the shoulder active and prevents collapsing into the joint.
  • Use a manageable range: Raise the arm only as high as you can without losing alignment.
  • Breathe through the rep: Do not hold your breath, especially during the top position.
  • Control the return: Lower the hand softly instead of slapping it back onto the floor.

FAQ

What muscles does the Plank Lateral Raise work?

The exercise mainly trains the core stabilizers because the body must resist rotation while one arm lifts. In addition, the shoulders, chest, triceps, glutes, and hip stabilizers assist with balance and support.

Is the Plank Lateral Raise a core exercise or a shoulder exercise?

It is both, but its biggest value is core stability. The shoulder performs the lateral arm raise, while the core works hard to prevent the torso and hips from twisting.

Why do my hips rotate during this exercise?

Hip rotation usually means the stance is too narrow, the core is not braced enough, or the arm is lifting too high. Widen your feet, slow down, and use a smaller range of motion.

Can beginners do the Plank Lateral Raise?

Beginners can practice it, but they should first own a strong high plank. For an easier version, widen the feet, lift the hand only a few inches, or perform the movement from the knees.

Should I use dumbbells for this exercise?

The version shown is bodyweight only. Add external load only after you can keep the hips level, the shoulders stable, and the return phase controlled on every repetition.

Medical disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and is not medical advice. If you feel sharp pain, shoulder discomfort, wrist irritation, or lower-back strain, stop the exercise and consult a qualified professional.