Exactly How to Do a Side Plank, According to a Pilates Instructor

POPSUGAR Photography | ChaunteĢ Vaughn
POPSUGAR Photography | ChaunteĢ Vaughn

No core routine is complete without side planks. They're a basic but challenging move for building a stronger core, challenging both your abs and your balance. Learning how to do a side plank isn't always easy, but if done correctly, the benefits go far beyond a simple ab exercise.

The "energy and length" required to master a side plank "activates muscles throughout your entire body, making planks and side planks one of the best full-body exercises you can do," says Pilates instructor and founder of Lindywell Pilates, Robin Long. That's also what makes them so hard. You're calling on muscles in your abs, arms, back, and hips to engage, all while you're trying to keep your balance.

If you always cringe when this pose gets called out by your yoga teacher, Pilates instructor, or trainer, it may be helpful to revisit the basics, or start with side plank modifications. Ahead, we asked Long how to do a side plank correctly, including plenty of side plank variations to try. Read on to find out which muscles side planks work, why they're worth your time, and what Long recommends for overall better side planking.

Benefits of Side Planks

Planks of any kind are an effective way to improve your posture, build core strength, and decrease back pain, Long says. Side planks specifically are great for targeting your transverse abdominis (the deepest core muscles) as well as your obliques ā€” the core muscles that wrap around the sides of your midsection to stabilize, rotate, and laterally bend your torso. But side planks also work your back, including the multifidus (which stabilizes your spine) and the powerful latissimus dorsi and lower trapezius muscles.

That's not all: side planks also recruit muscles in your chest, shoulders, and glutes (especially your hip abductors), making them a near-total-body exercise. Plus, side planks force you to work your body unilaterally (one side at a time), which makes it easier to notice and address muscle imbalances. Unilateral movements also help muscles that sometimes get overpowered or overshadowed when you're working both sides at the same time.

How to Do a Side Plank

Long has plenty of tips to help you learn how to do a side plank with proper form. You can choose to do side planks on your elbow or your hand, but either way, it's important to make sure your point of contact with the floor (i.e., your elbow or palm) is directly beneath your shoulder. "You want to create a base of support for your shoulder, so be careful to not draw your arm in too close," Long says.

For side planks of any kind, think about lifting "your rib cage away from your mat to lengthen and align your spine," while pushing down into the floor with your bottom foot "to keep your legs active and strong," Long says. Also think about pulling your shoulder blades down your back, and avoid letting your supporting shoulder move toward your ear. Performing a side plank on your hand requires extra shoulder stability and balance. Here's how to do it correctly:

POPSUGAR Photography | ChaunteĢ Vaughn
  • Start in a high plank position with shoulders over your wrists. Shift your weight into your right hand and foot, and carefully rotate your body so you're balancing on your right palm and the outside of your right foot, with your left leg and foot stacked on top of the right. (To modify slightly, you can also keep your left foot on the floor.)
  • Keep your core engaged, and make sure your body is forming a straight line from head to heels. Think about lifting up with your bottom hip, and keep your gaze straight forward so your neck is long. Make sure your hips are stacked; don't allow your hips to tilt forward or backward. Press into all five fingers on the floor to take pressure off your wrist.
  • Hold this position for 30 to 60 seconds. Repeat on the other side.

Side-Plank Variation: Elbow Side Plank

If performing a side plank on your hand puts too much pressure on your wrist or feels uncomfortable on your shoulders, you can still get the benefits of side planks by doing them on your elbow. Since your forearm helps provide a larger base, it's also a little easier to balance, compared to a side plank on your hand.

POPSUGAR Photography | ChaunteĢ Vaughn
  • Lie on your right side on a mat. Prop yourself up on your forearm, making sure your shoulder is right over your elbow. With your legs fully extended, stack your left foot on top of your right.
  • Press into your right foot and elbow to lift your hips up into a side plank, forming a straight line from head to heels. Keep your neck long, and make sure your hips are stacked; don't allow your hips to tilt forward or backward.
  • Hold this position for 30 to 60 seconds. Repeat on the other side.

Side-Plank Variation: Kneeling Side Plank

This modified side-plank variation is the ideal side plank for beginners. "Once you feel strong in this position, the next step is to extend your legs, stack your feet, and lift into a full side plank," Long says. These steps will help you work your way up:

POPSUGAR Photography | ChaunteĢ Vaughn
  • Lie on your right side on a mat. Prop yourself up on your forearm, making sure your shoulder is right over your elbow. Stack your left leg on top of your right with your knees bent at a 90-degree angle, keeping them in line with your hips and shoulders.
  • Press into your right knee and elbow to lift your hips up into a side plank, forming a straight line from head to knees. Keep your neck long, and make sure your hips are stacked; don't allow your hips to tilt forward or backward. Squeeze your glutes to make sure you're not bending at your hips.
  • Hold this position for 30 to 60 seconds. Repeat on the other side.

Side-Plank Variation: Side-Plank Lifts (or Dips)

To make the elbow side plank a little harder, feel free to add some hip dips.

POPSUGAR Photography | ChaunteĢ Vaughn
  • Start in an elbow-plank position as detailed above.
  • Keeping your hips stacked one above the other, lower your hips a couple of inches toward the floor. Avoid shrugging in your bottom shoulder; keep everything still, and only lower your hips.
  • Lift your hips up as high as you can, a few inches above your normal side plank. That's one rep.

Side-Plank Variation: Side-Plank Crunch

You can do this advanced side-plank variation while balancing on your elbow or hand, though the elbow is an easier place to start.

  • Start in an elbow-plank position as detailed above with your left elbow on the floor and your right hand behind your head.
  • Keeping your torso stable and your hips lifted, bring your right leg up toward your shoulder to lightly tap your right elbow.
  • Lengthen your right leg to return to the starting position. That's one rep.

Side-Plank Variation: Elbow-Side-Plank Rotation

Add a bonus core and balance challenge to your side plank by adding a rotation. Take these nice and slow to make sure you're engaging your core and rotating with control.

  • Start in side plank on your right elbow with your feet stacked and your left hand behind your head.
  • Exhale, engage your deep abs, and rotate your left shoulder and ribs toward the floor, bringing your left elbow toward your right hand. Try to keep your hips and knees pointing forward.
  • Hold this a moment, twisting further to deepen your abdominal connection by pulling your navel in toward your spine.
  • Slowly rotate your chest back to the starting position. That's one rep.

Side-Plank Variation: Side-Plank Leg Lift

To get your glutes even more involved, add a leg lift to your side plank ā€” whether on your hand or elbow.

  • Start in an elbow plank or high plank on your right side. Reach your left arm up toward the ceiling, or place your left hand on your hip.
  • Keeping your torso stable and your hips lifted, lift your left leg up just higher than your top hip.
  • Slowly lower your left foot to tap your right. That's one rep.

Lauren Mazzo was the senior fitness editor at POPSUGAR. She is a certified personal trainer and fitness nutrition specialist through the American Council on Exercise. Prior to joining POPSUGAR, she worked for six years as a writer and editor for Shape Magazine covering health, fitness, nutrition, mental health, sex and relationships, beauty, and astrology.