You’re probably here because you want to get defined six-pack abs, and you’ve heard you need to train your obliques to achieve this.
I’ll explain the best exercises for training your obliques and how to put them into a workout, but before we get into that, it’s worth knowing the truth about getting a six-pack:
All of that said, the abs (including the obliques) respond to strength training like any other muscle—by getting bigger and stronger. And training them directly can make them “pop” a little more.
The key point to understand is that ~90-to-95% of your oblique gains are going to come from a combination of heavy compound weightlifting and a few bread-and-butter ab exercises. Doing a few exercises specifically to target the obliques is what gets you those last few percentage points.
So, if you feel the juice of training your obliques is worth the six-pack squeeze, carry on.
Your obliques have three main jobs:
The best oblique workouts center around a handful of exercises that force your obliques to produce high levels of tension. The good news is that most traditional ab exercises like cable crunches, weighted situps, and ab wheel rollouts, accomplish this. You don’t need a suite of special exercises specifically for the obliques, much less a whole workout.
That’s basically the formula I used to develop my obliques: a program built around heavy barbell compound weightlifting, a few well-chosen exercises that made it easy to progressively overload my obliques, and dieting down to single-digit body fat percentage.
Here’s how it turned out:
Now let’s get to the workout.
Below is the best routine you can do to develop your obliques. It’s two short workouts—A and B—each done once per week.
The best way to schedule them is to tack them onto the end of two existing workouts on nonconsecutive days. For example, if you train Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, you could add Oblique Workout A to the end of Monday’s workout and Oblique Workout B to the end of Friday’s session.
Looking at these workouts, you might wonder if doing just two exercises per workout is enough. The answer is yes.
Remember, you’re doing this workout at the end of a session where you’ve already squatted, deadlifted, pressed, or rowed heavy weights. Your obliques have already done plenty of work stabilizing your spine and resisting rotation under those loads.
All that’s left is to train the functions compounds don’t cover—bringing your ribs toward your hips and rotating your torso—and a couple of weighted exercises is all you need to do it.
To get results, two more things matter: intensity and progression.
To ensure you’re training intensely enough, finish most sets 0–2 reps shy of failure—the point where you couldn’t do another rep with good form despite giving your all. To gauge whether you’re reaching this point, ask yourself at the end of each set, “How many more reps could I have done?”
If the answer is more than two, add weight or reps in the next set.
Frankly, it’s fine to take ab exercises to failure on most sets. Yes, it’s uncomfortable, but it ensures you’re truly pushing yourself (most people hold back more than they realize), and it’s almost impossible to “overtrain” your abs. Just make sure your form doesn’t slip, especially on exercises like the weighted situp.
To keep progressing, use the following strategy (double progression):
If your workout calls for 10–20 reps of the cable crunch and you complete 20 reps in a set, increase the weight by 5 pounds for your next set. If the new weight is so challenging that you can’t complete at least 10 reps in subsequent sets, reduce the load by 5 pounds to stay in the 10–20 rep range.
The routine above really is all that’s required to develop standout obliques, so you never need to do anything different. That said, doing the same exercises for months on end can get tedious, so you might want to swap in alternatives occasionally to keep your training fresh.
For that reason, the list below includes the four exercises from the workout plus one alternative that works well as a substitute. Just don’t stray far from this list—anything outside it is significantly less effective.
Why: The cable crunch trains your oblique muscles through a full range of motion, keeps constant tension on the muscles throughout each rep, and allows you to incrementally add weight over time. These three attributes make the cable crunch one of the single best oblique exercises you can do.
How to:
Expert Tip: Keep your hips and knees locked in the same position throughout each rep. If you bend or straighten them as you crunch, your hip flexors and glutes start helping with the movement, which makes the exercise easier for your obliques.
Why: The oblique cable crunch is the same exercise as the standard cable crunch with one key difference: as you crunch down, you also rotate your torso to bring one elbow toward your opposite knee. That rotation puts the obliques to work in a different way—they’re the muscles primarily responsible for twisting your torso, so adding the twist trains them with a movement the standard cable crunch doesn’t.
Like the standard cable crunch, it’s easy to progress with more weight over time, which makes it one of the most effective oblique exercises you can do.
How to:
Expert Tip: Don’t try to over-rotate. You only need to bring your elbow to (or near) the opposite knee—going further than that doesn’t train your obliques any better, forces you to use lighter weights, and can throw off your balance.
Why: Like the cable crunch, the decline weighted situp trains your obliques (and the rest of your abs) through a full range of motion and allows you to incrementally add weight over time. Some people also find it more comfortable than the cable crunch and feel it better targets all the muscles of the core.
The main downside is that the exercise is relatively easy at the top of the movement (when your chest is closest to your knees) and much more difficult when you’re leaning back, but it’s still better than most exercises in this regard.
How to:
Expert Tip: Keep a firm grip on the weight and make sure you don’t let it slide down your chest—this makes the exercise easier and less effective. Instead, keep it positioned as high on your chest as you comfortably can, just below your chin.
Why: The ab wheel rollout trains your entire core—including your obliques—isometrically.4 As you roll forward, your obliques have to fight the urge to let your torso twist or your lower back collapse, and as you roll back, they help pull your body in.
Although bodyweight exercises generally aren’t as effective as weighted exercises, the ab-wheel rollout is actually one of the most demanding oblique exercises you can do. Ab wheels are also simple, inexpensive, and found in most gyms, making them a practical option for almost any training setup.
How to:
Expert Tip: Do the movement smoothly. If you find yourself jerking the wheel back and forth, make the exercise easier by not extending the wheel as far forward. To make the exercise harder, you can a) allow the wheel to roll farther forward, b) raise your knees off the floor so you’re balancing on your toes, c) elevate your feet a few inches off the ground d) slow down the movement so you expose your abs to more time under tension.
Why: The main benefits of the captain’s chair leg raise are that it’s convenient—most gyms have one—and challenging for a bodyweight exercise. Most people can only do about 8–10 strict reps per set. This means it produces a high level of tension despite being harder to progress than something like a cable crunch.
How to:
Expert Tip: If you’re not strong enough to lift your legs when they’re perfectly straight, it’s fine to start with a slight bend in your knees. Over time, work toward straightening your legs to gradually increase the resistance. If the regular captain’s chair leg raise feels too easy, you can also add weight by using ankle weights or pinching a small dumbbell between your feet, but this becomes impractical with anything other than relatively light weights.
You don’t need supplements to develop your obliques. That said, the right ones can make the process easier. Here are three worth considering:
Want even more specific supplement advice? Take the Legion Supplement Finder Quiz to learn exactly what supplements are right for you.
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