Front Plank with Arm Lift

Front Plank with Arm Lift: Form, Benefits, Sets, Tips & FAQ

Learn the Front Plank with Arm Lift for anti-rotation core strength, shoulder stability, and better body control with proper form, sets, tips, and FAQs.

Front Plank with Arm Lift: Form, Benefits, Sets, Tips & FAQ
Core Stability

Front Plank with Arm Lift

Intermediate Bodyweight Anti-Rotation / Core Control
The Front Plank with Arm Lift is a controlled bodyweight core exercise that challenges your abs, obliques, shoulders, glutes, and spinal stabilizers. Instead of simply holding a plank, you lift one arm while keeping your hips, ribs, and torso steady. The goal is not to raise the arm as high as possible. The real goal is to keep the body quiet while one support point is removed.

This plank variation builds anti-rotation strength, which means your core learns to resist twisting when one arm leaves the floor. It is especially useful for improving plank endurance, shoulder stability, posture, athletic control, and full-body coordination. The movement should look smooth and deliberate. If your hips swing, your lower back drops, or your shoulders shrug, reduce the range and slow the tempo.

Safety note: Stop if you feel sharp shoulder pain, wrist pain, lower-back compression, dizziness, or tingling. Keep the ribs pulled in, the glutes lightly squeezed, and the neck neutral throughout every rep.

Quick Overview

Body Part Core
Primary Muscle Rectus abdominis, transverse abdominis, and obliques
Secondary Muscle Shoulders, chest, triceps, glutes, lower-back stabilizers, and serratus anterior
Equipment None required; optional exercise mat
Difficulty Intermediate because the body must resist rotation while one arm lifts

Sets & Reps (By Goal)

  • Core control: 2–3 sets × 6–8 reps per side with slow, clean movement.
  • Strength endurance: 3–4 sets × 8–12 reps per side with a steady plank line.
  • Anti-rotation training: 3 sets × 5–8 reps per side with a 2–3 second hold at the top.
  • Warm-up activation: 1–2 sets × 5–6 reps per side before upper-body or core workouts.

Progression rule: First improve stillness. Then increase hold time, reps, or set volume. Do not progress if your hips rotate or your lower back sinks.

Setup / Starting Position

  1. Start in a high plank: Place your hands under your shoulders with your arms straight and palms flat.
  2. Set your feet wider than hip-width: A slightly wider stance gives you more stability and reduces hip rotation.
  3. Create a straight body line: Keep your head, upper back, hips, knees, and heels aligned.
  4. Brace your core: Pull your ribs down gently and tighten your abs as if preparing for a light punch.
  5. Engage your glutes: A light glute squeeze helps protect the lower back and keeps the pelvis level.
  6. Press the floor away: Push through your supporting hand so the shoulder blade stays stable.

Setup tip: If the movement feels unstable, separate your feet more. A wider base makes it easier to learn proper control.

Execution (Step-by-Step)

  1. Hold a strong plank: Keep your shoulders stacked over your hands and your body long from head to heels.
  2. Shift weight slightly: Move a small amount of pressure into one hand without twisting your hips.
  3. Lift one arm forward: Raise the arm slowly in front of you until it reaches about shoulder height or slightly below.
  4. Pause with control: Hold briefly while keeping your hips square to the floor.
  5. Lower the hand softly: Return the hand under the shoulder without dropping your chest or rocking your body.
  6. Reset your plank: Rebuild tension before lifting the opposite arm.
  7. Alternate sides: Continue at a controlled tempo, keeping every rep smooth and stable.
Form checkpoint: The best rep is the one where the arm moves but the torso barely changes. Keep your hips level, your abs tight, and your breathing steady.

Pro Tips & Common Mistakes

  • Move slowly: Fast reps usually create momentum and hide weak core control.
  • Keep the hips square: Avoid opening one hip toward the ceiling when the arm lifts.
  • Do not let the low back sag: Brace your abs and squeeze your glutes to maintain a neutral spine.
  • Avoid shrugging: Keep your neck long and your shoulder away from your ear.
  • Use a wider foot stance: This helps you control rotation, especially when learning the exercise.
  • Do not over-lift the arm: Shoulder height is enough. Higher is not always better.
  • Press through the support hand: A strong base improves shoulder stability and prevents collapsing.
  • Breathe during the hold: Do not hold your breath. Controlled breathing helps maintain tension without stiffness.

FAQ

What muscles does the Front Plank with Arm Lift work?

It mainly works the abs, transverse abdominis, and obliques. It also trains the shoulders, chest, triceps, glutes, serratus anterior, and lower-back stabilizers because your body must stay firm while one arm lifts.

Is the Front Plank with Arm Lift good for beginners?

It can be challenging for beginners. Start with a regular high plank first. Once you can hold a clean plank without sagging or shaking excessively, progress to small arm lifts with a wider foot stance.

Why do my hips twist when I lift my arm?

Your hips twist because your body is trying to replace missing stability with rotation. Widen your feet, slow the movement, brace your abs harder, and lift the arm only a few inches until control improves.

Should I lift the arm high?

No. Lift only as high as you can while keeping your ribs, hips, and spine stable. Shoulder height is usually enough. A lower lift with perfect control is better than a high lift with twisting.

Can this exercise help with posture?

Yes. It strengthens the core and shoulder stabilizers that help support better upper-body alignment. For best posture results, combine it with rows, face pulls, thoracic mobility, and consistent plank control work.

Disclaimer: This content is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not medical advice. If you have shoulder, wrist, back, or neck pain, consult a qualified professional before training.