Plank Walk Up

Plank Walk-Up (Plank to Push-Up): Form, Sets & Reps, Tips + FAQ

Plank Walk-Up (Plank to Push-Up): Form, Sets & Reps, Tips + FAQ
Core Stability

Plank Walk-Up (Plank to Push-Up)

Intermediate Bodyweight (Mat Optional) Anti-Rotation + Shoulder Endurance
The Plank Walk-Up (also called the Plank to Push-Up or Up-Down Plank) is a high-value core drill that trains anti-rotation, shoulder stability, and triceps endurance. You’ll transition from a high plank down to a forearm plank and back up—while keeping your hips quiet and your body in a straight line.

This movement is less about speed and more about control. The goal is to keep your torso stable as your arms move—no twisting, no sagging, and no “piking” the hips. If your hips sway side-to-side, slow down, widen your stance, and shorten the range until you can keep the reps clean.

Safety tip: Stop if you feel sharp shoulder pain, wrist pain, numbness/tingling, or low-back pinching. Regress to an incline version (hands on a bench) and keep your ribs stacked over your pelvis.

Quick Overview

Body Part Core
Primary Muscle Core stabilizers (Transverse abdominis, Obliques, Rectus abdominis)
Secondary Muscle Shoulders (anterior delts), Triceps, Serratus anterior, Glutes (stability)
Equipment None (optional: exercise mat, timer)
Difficulty Intermediate (core control + shoulder endurance)

Sets & Reps (By Goal)

  • Core stability (quality reps): 3–5 sets × 6–10 reps (45–75 sec rest)
  • Shoulder & triceps endurance: 3–4 sets × 10–16 reps (30–60 sec rest)
  • Conditioning / fat-loss circuits: 4–8 rounds × 20–40 sec work (20–40 sec rest)
  • Warm-up activation: 2–3 sets × 5–8 reps (slow tempo, perfect control)

Progression rule: Earn progress by reducing hip sway first, then adding reps/time. Next progressions: slower negatives, narrower stance, or adding a light vest.

Setup / Starting Position

  1. Start in a high plank: Hands under shoulders, elbows locked but not hyperextended.
  2. Foot stance for stability: Set feet slightly wider than hip-width to reduce rocking.
  3. Brace the core: Ribs down, pelvis neutral—avoid arching the low back.
  4. Squeeze glutes lightly: This helps keep the hips level and the spine neutral.
  5. Neck neutral: Eyes on the floor a few inches ahead of your hands.

Tip: If wrists bother you, use push-up handles, dumbbells as handles, or perform the drill on fists (neutral wrist).

Execution (Step-by-Step)

  1. Shift slightly: Transfer a small amount of weight to one hand without twisting your hips.
  2. Lower to forearm #1: Place your first forearm down directly under the shoulder.
  3. Lower to forearm #2: Bring the other forearm down—now you’re in a forearm plank.
  4. Press up (palm #1): Plant one palm under the shoulder and press to straighten the arm.
  5. Press up (palm #2): Plant the other palm and return to a strong high plank.
  6. Alternate the lead arm: Switch which side goes first each rep to keep shoulders balanced.
Form checkpoint: Your hips should stay square to the floor. If your torso rotates, slow down, widen your feet, and reduce the “push” into the floor.

Pro Tips & Common Mistakes

  • Go slow to stay stable: Control beats speed—especially if hips twist.
  • Hands & elbows under shoulders: Don’t reach forward and overload the shoulders.
  • Avoid low-back sag: Keep ribs down and glutes lightly engaged.
  • Don’t hike hips: Piking turns it into a different movement and reduces core demand.
  • Alternate sides: Leading with one arm only can irritate one shoulder over time.
  • Use a metronome tempo: Example: 1–2 sec down, 1 sec pause, 1–2 sec up.

FAQ

Where should I feel the plank walk-up?

Mostly in the core (especially obliques for anti-rotation), plus shoulders and triceps. If you feel it mainly in the low back, reset your ribs/pelvis and shorten the set.

How do I make it easier?

Use an incline (hands on a bench/couch), widen your stance, and move slower. You can also drop to knees for a controlled regression.

How do I make it harder?

Narrow your stance, slow the tempo, add a brief pause in forearm plank, increase time under tension, or wear a light weighted vest.

Should I do reps or timed sets?

For technique and strength, use reps. For conditioning, use time (20–40 seconds). Choose the option that lets you keep hips stable and spine neutral.

What if my wrists or shoulders hurt?

Try handles (push-up bars), an incline, or shorten your range. Keep hands stacked under shoulders. If pain persists or feels sharp, stop and seek professional guidance.

Medical disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and is not medical advice. If symptoms persist or worsen, consult a qualified healthcare professional.