Nutritious Life: Healthy Tips, Healthy Recipes, Exercise

Become a Nutrition Coach! Get certified. Grow your business. Join our thriving community. Call 888-488-4077 or Schedule an Appointment!

|

How to Do a Perfect Plank

By Robin Barrie Kaiden, MS, RD, CDN, NLC

With years of experience as a fitness professional, I’ve learned the most from my mistakes (and injuries), and I cannot stress this enough: Proper form is imperative to meet goals and prevent injury while working out! You can read more about my story and approach, here. 

Now, I hope you can learn from me, as I bring you video tutorials over the next few weeks teaching you how to execute proper form for the common exercises, like push-ups and squats. You can use your new skills to work out on your own at home or at the gym, or walk into a group workout class with body knowledge that will put you so far ahead.


A plank is a great exercise for working on core strength, posture, and balance.

The main muscles used are in your abdomen: the rectus and transverse abdominal muscles, and your erector spinae.

While you are in this isometric hold, your obliques, hip flexors, serratus anterior, quadriceps, glutes, back (traps and rhomboids), shoulders (deltoids), and chest muscles are also working as stabilizers.

RELATED: 3 Effective Pilates Exercise for Core Strength

So as you can see, it is a great full-body exercise. Here is my recommended set-up.

How to Do a Perfect Plank

  1. Lower yourself down to the floor or a mat in a prone position.
  2. Make sure your feet are together.
  3. Keep your elbows right under your shoulders.
  4. Engage the glutes, and come up onto your toes.
  5. Lift your hips up.
  6. Think about actively driving your elbows toward your toes and keeping your body in one long, straight line.

If you feel too weak and cannot keep your form correct while performing a plank on the floor (i.e. your mid-section is drooping towards the floor), you can modify this exercise. I don’t suggest dropping to your knees, because doing so removes the work from the bottom half of your body, and you will only be using upper body strength. By keeping the torso long and placing it on an incline, you can still focus on core strength, but the exercise becomes easier. You can use a wall, (ballet) bar, workout bench, park bench, or a barbell to perform a modified plank.

RELATED: Are Your Workouts Too Intense?

Remember:  It’s better for your body to plank with proper form for a shorter time than to hold an improper plank for too long and risk injury. Many workouts or exercise classes use plank variations. Planks can be on your hands or on your side. They can get fancy (and more challenging) by asking you pulse, lift hands and feet, or use props like a ball. I only recommend doing those more advanced version of a plank if:

  1. You can perform a basic plank properly.
  2. You feel comfortable enough and safe during these exercises. A challenge (and a shaking abdomen) is okay, but too much discomfort or pain is not.

Happy planking!

More Perfect Form with Robin Barrie Kaiden:

How to Do a Push-Up
Why Form Matters

(Image: Robin Barrie Kaiden)

About Nutritious Life Editors

The Nutritious Life Editors are a team of healthy lifestyle enthusiasts who not only subscribe to — and live! — the 8 Pillars of a Nutritious Life, but also have access to some of the savviest thought leaders in the health and wellness space — including our founder and resident dietitian, Keri Glassman. From the hottest trends in wellness to the latest medical science, we stay on top of it all in order to deliver the info YOU need to live your most nutritious life.

DISCOVER MORE

Why THC Beverages Can Thoughtfully Fit Into a Health and Wellness Plan in 2026

What Does a Nutrition Coach Actually Do? (2026 Guide)

RECENT ARTICLES

Healthy Breakfasts That You Haven’t Thought Of

28 Anti-Bloat Foods to Eat When You’re Feeling Puffy

28 Anti-Bloat Foods to Eat When You’re Feeling Puffy

red white and blue 4th of july recipes

9 Effortless Red, White, and Blue 4th of July Recipes

Does Grilling Make Food Carcinogenic?

Does Grilling Make Food Carcinogenic?

WANT A SNEAK PEEK INSIDE THE PROGRAM?

Get FREE access to some of the core training materials that make up our signature program
– Become a Nutrition Coach.

STAY UP TO DATE

Don’t Miss Out on Living a Nutritious Life!

Sign up to our newsletter today

Nutritious Life Newsletter - articles sidebar

Interested in joining our wellness community and becoming a Nutritious Life Master Certified Nutrition and Wellness Coach?

Enter your info, get free access now to a sample class!

Inside Articles page - take a free class form

"*" indicates required fields

I agree*
I would like to receive text messages, and agree to the Terms of Service & Privacy Policy. Reply STOP to cancel, HELP for help. Msg & data rates may apply. Msg frequency varies.

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE

Nutritious Life 8 Pillars - Sweat Often

3 Tips to Jog Your Muscle Memory

Nutritious Life 8 Pillars - Love More

Sexercise Your Way to Happier—and Yes, Healthier—You

Nutritious Life 8 Pillars - Sweat Often

Twist and Shout: How to Cleanse with Food and Yoga

Nutritious Life 8 Pillars - Sweat Often

Why You Aren’t Losing Weight…Even Though You’re Exercising!

Nutritious Life 8 Pillars - Sweat Often

10 Awesome Pre- and Post-Workout Snacks

Nutritious Life 8 Pillars - Sweat Often

Pilates vs Yoga: 4 Ways They Are Different

JOIN THE COMMUNITY

Take the first step toward becoming the healthiest version of yourself, and empower others to do the same!

Share via
FOOTER TEXT
Send this to a friend