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16 Best Floor Exercises To Melt Belly Fat

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16 Best Floor Exercises To Melt Belly Fat

Contrary to popular belief, the best way to lose belly fat isn’t through jogging and just performing endless sets of crunches, sit-ups, and side bends. The secret to losing fat in your stomach area is to perform strength training regularly and to get in a mixture of both steady-state and interval cardio training. Pretty plain and simple! That’s why we’ve rounded up some of the best floor exercises to melt belly fat. When you keep up this regimen along with eating a healthy diet, then the pounds and inches will start coming off.

These exercises will help increase your calorie burn, daily activity, and also keep your muscles stimulated to aid in fat loss. If you’re not a gym person and prefer to stick with bodyweight movements for now, this is a great option. Keep reading to learn the best floor exercises to melt belly fat. And when you’re done, be sure to check out 9 Lazy Ways to Lose Weight All Month Long.

Reverse Crunches

trainer demonstrating reverse crunches to reduce your midsection
Tim Liu, C.S.C.S.

This list of floor exercises to melt belly fat kicks off with the reverse crunch. Lie down with your lower back flat on the floor. Keep your core tight. Raise your feet back toward your body, and flex your abs hard. Then, lower your legs slowly, maintaining tension in your core before performing another rep. Complete three sets of 10 to 15 reps.

RELATED: A 69-Year-Old Trainer Shares the 7 Fitness Habits That Keep Her Looking 25

Bicycle Crunches

Bicycle CrunchesBicycle Crunches
Tim Liu, C.S.C.S.

Lie flat on your back with your hands at the back of your head. Rotate your body up by taking one elbow and bringing it toward the opposite knee. Fully extend the other leg by reaching your heel straight out. Flex your abs hard as you finish, then repeat with the opposite side. Complete three sets of 30 reps.

Side Plank Hip Lifts

trainer demonstrating side plank hip raise to get a flatter stomach at 50trainer demonstrating side plank hip raise to get a flatter stomach at 50
Tim Liu, C.S.C.S.

For the side plank hip lift, set yourself up against a wall with your heels, butt, and shoulders touching the surface. Align your shoulder with your wrist, and stack your feet on top of each other. Keep your core tight and your glutes squeezed as you tilt and flex your hips straight up and down, maintaining tension in your obliques. Perform three sets of 10 reps on each leg.

Hand-Release Pushups

hand release pushuphand release pushup
Tim Liu, C.S.C.S.

Assume a pushup position with your shoulders in line with your wrists and your back straight. Keep your core tight and your glutes squeezed, and lower yourself under control until your whole body is on the floor. When you reach the bottom, take your hands off the ground, then place them back to push yourself up. Flex your triceps and chest at the top to finish before performing another rep. Complete three sets of 10 to 15 reps.

RELATED: 5 Best At-Home Workouts To Shrink & Tone Love Handles

Figure 8

figure 8 exercisefigure 8 exercise
Tim Liu, C.S.C.S.

Lean back with your feet fully extended. Lift your legs a few inches off the ground, and begin drawing a figure 8 (or infinity sign) with your legs, crisscrossing while maintaining tension in your core. Once you complete one loop around and draw a figure 8, that’s one rep. You can continue drawing in the same direction, or go in reverse for the next rep. Complete three sets of 8 to 10 reps.

Duck Walks

trainer doing duck walkstrainer doing duck walks
Tim Liu, C.S.C.S.

Start your duck walks by getting into a deep squat with your hips at least parallel to the ground. Keep your chest tall and your core tight, and take a mini step forward with one leg, then with the other. As you walk in this position, make sure you stay low while keeping all the tension in your legs. Walk down forward, then reverse the motion and walk backward to the starting position. Perform three to four sets of 15 reps, forward and backward.

Feet-Elevated Pushups

trainer doing feet elevated pushups, part of belly fat burner workouttrainer doing feet elevated pushups, part of belly fat burner workout
Tim Liu, C.S.C.S.

To perform feet-elevated pushups, begin by placing both hands in line with your shoulders in a pushup position while positioning your feet on top of a stable surface. Keep your core tight, hips high, and chest tall, and use your control to lower your body, coming down until your chest is an inch or two above the floor. Then, push yourself back up, flexing your upper pecs and triceps to finish. Perform three to four sets of 10 to 15 reps.

RELATED: The #1 Daily Chair Yoga Workout To Shrink Belly Fat

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Side Plank with Leg Raise

side plank with leg raise, belly fat burner workoutside plank with leg raise, belly fat burner workout
Tim Liu, C.S.C.S.

Get into a side plank position with your elbow in line with your shoulder and your feet stacked. Keeping your abs tight, begin to raise your top leg up. Lift the heel as high as possible, as you squeeze the glute hard at the top. Lower using control, then perform another rep. Complete three to four sets of 10 reps on each leg.

Split Squats with Pulse

trainer performing split squat with pulsetrainer performing split squat with pulse
Tim Liu, C.S.C.S.

Begin split squats with a pulse in a staggered stance—one foot should be in front, and the other foot should be behind you with your toes firmly planted. Keep your chest tall and your core tight, and lower yourself until your back knee touches the floor. Come up 1/4 of the way, then return to the lowered position. Drive through the heel of the front leg to come all the way up. That counts as one rep. Perform three to four sets of 10 reps on each leg.

V-Twist

trainer doing v-twisttrainer doing v-twist
Tim Liu, C.S.C.S.

For the V-Twist, get into position by lying flat on your back with your knees bent 90 degrees. Keep your core tight, curl up, and reach to one side while extending your legs out at the same time. Crunch hard at the top, return to the starting position, and then crunch up on the other. Perform three to four sets of 10 reps on each side.

RELATED: I Tried 4 Pairs of HOKA Sneakers & One Beats the Rest By a Mile

Judo Pushups

judo pushupjudo pushup
Tim Liu, C.S.C.S.

This exercise is a great variation of the pushup, as it stretches out your core and improves your shoulder mobility. Start by getting into a classic pushup position. Drive your hips up toward the ceiling, and stretch the hamstrings. Swoop down toward the ground, leading with your head by your chest. Right before your body reaches the ground, push yourself back up, flexing your triceps to finish. Complete three sets of 10 to 15 reps.

Heel Elevated Single-Leg Glute Bridge

single-foot elevated glute bridgesingle-foot elevated glute bridge
Tim Liu, C.S.C.S.

Place your heel on top of an elevated sturdy surface with your knee bent and your other leg up in the air. Keep your core tight, and push through the heel and the hip of the working leg, extending your hip up. Flex your glute hard at the top, then lower back to the ground, keeping control, before performing another rep. Perform three sets of 15 reps for each leg.

Floor Dips

trainer doing floor dips, demonstrating exercise to get rid of bat wingstrainer doing floor dips, demonstrating exercise to get rid of bat wings
Tim Liu, C.S.C.S.

Sit on the floor with your knees bent and your arms behind you. Push yourself up by driving through your palms, extending your arms out as far as you can. Flex your triceps hard at the top, then come all the way down until you’re seated before performing another rep. Perform three sets of 15 to 20 reps.

Side Plank Oblique Crunches

side plank crunch to slim down a thick waistlineside plank crunch to slim down a thick waistline
Tim Liu, C.S.C.S.

Assume a side plank position with your bottom leg in front of the top one. With your top hand holding your head, perform a side crunch by bringing the top elbow toward the bottom knee. Flex your oblique hard, then return to the starting position before performing another rep. Perform three sets of 10 to 15 reps for each side.

Supine Vacuum Pose

Supine Vacuum PoseSupine Vacuum Pose
Tim Liu, C.S.C.S.

Lie flat on your back with your knees bent and your feet flat on the floor. Once you’re in this position, exhale all of your air, and hollow out your stomach. Draw your belly button in toward your spine as much as you can. This will activate your transverse abdominis muscle. Hold this position for 15 seconds to start, then build yourself up to a longer hold, up to 60 seconds.

Hollow Body Hold

hollow body holdhollow body hold
Supine Vacuum Pose

This list of floor exercises to melt belly fat wraps up with the hollow body hold. Lie flat on your back with your arms extended over your head and your feet straight out and together. Press your lower back into the floor, and slightly curl up, lifting your legs and arms in the air. Your body should be in the shape of a banana.

Be sure to keep tension in your core at all times and try not to compensate with your lower back. You can regress the exercise by raising both your legs and arms higher until you get the strength to have it lower. Do the hollow body hold three times for 20 to 30 seconds.

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'Constantly trying to fit exercise around other things': Why women have less time to exercise than men

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'Constantly trying to fit exercise around other things': Why women have less time to exercise than men

Finding time to exercise can be hard, and the research shows that’s especially true for mums.  

“When you ask people ‘why don’t you do more physical activity’, the most common reason is they don’t have enough time,” says Lyndall Strazdins from Australian National University.

“Half of the world are insufficiently active, and within that group there is the consistent gender gap which widens over time.”

That gap is particularly profound in heterosexual couples with kids, Professor Strazdins’ research published in 2022 found.

The researchers looked at data from the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) survey, focusing on the effects of both paid work and unpaid caring and domestic responsibilities on physical activity.

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It shows as family demands increase, women’s physical activity becomes more limited, but the same doesn’t happen for men.

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Forget about the gym! Chicken-sizing will keep you fit. Bonus: Fresh eggs

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Forget about the gym! Chicken-sizing will keep you fit. Bonus: Fresh eggs

Andy Rementer / for NPR

In my 20s, I loved running. I called it “my Prozac.” Every week, I tried to run 25 miles. It kept my mood up and my heart healthy.

But when I reached my 30s, my relationship with running soured. My back started protesting the long runs. Then it protested the short runs. Eventually, one morning, I couldn’t walk. My back said, “Nope, no more running.”

For months, I felt pretty sad about this huge loss in my life. I tried other types of exercising, but my back protested it all — biking, yoga, pilates, zumba, you name it. Everything that our society calls “exercising” hurt my back for many days afterward. “Sorry. But we’re done with all of that,” my 33 vertebrae said in unison.

A different exercise mind-set

At the same time, I was reporting on global health for NPR, and I started to realize that exercising per se was a strange phenomenon. Around the world, people don’t necessarily go out and move their bodies with the intent to burn calories and tone their thighs (mmmm … chicken thighs). Instead, they embrace a revolutionary idea: They move — and move quite a bit — with a clear purpose in mind beyond the movement. They move to reach a destination. They move to hunt or forage. They move to take care of animals or tend crops. Or build a structure. Or gather firewood.

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“Every day you’re doing something from dawn to dusk,” says Esther Ngumbi, who grew up in rural Kenya and is now an entomologist at the University of Illinois, Urbana. “In the morning, you have to go to the river to fetch water and come back. Then you go to the farm during the day and go fetch fire wood. Then at dusk, you have to go fetch water again.”

In other words, Ngumbi was weightlifting, not three times a week but at least twice a day. “I had to carry a 25-gallon bucket of water from the river,” she exclaims. “So yeah, I was weightlifting. I was exercising 24-7.”

Tying movement to purpose felt rewarding, Ngumbi says. And yet, here in the U.S. we’ve replaced almost all of this rewarding movement with machines. “The river exists in my home now. The fire stays at my home. And I can turn them both on and off when I need to,” she says laughing. “So now that I don’t have this purpose [to move] and all these things I need to do, I started gaining pounds. I’m just eating more and moving much less.” So Ngumbi started to exercise — at the gym.

But I started to wonder if I could go the opposite direction. If I could take inspiration from people all over the world and add more purpose and meaning to my exercising. “Hmm,” I thought, “maybe this type of movement could be my version of crossfit and barre.”

And so, after a decade of being a couch potato, I launched the most successful exercising program of my life. I bought 15 chicks, two coops and a book about how to raise a backyard flock. And I started chicken-sizing.

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To be honest, chicken-sizing is harder than I thought it would be. Way harder. Taking care of flightless birds does tone your core and thighs. Because it requires bending, squatting and carrying heavy loads around your yard. One weekend, I tracked what chicken-sizing involved, and I counted about 20-30 squats each day, 1,500 extra steps each day (depending on how many chickens I have to chase back into the pen), and lots of lifting poultry water dispensers up, down and around the yard. They’re not 25 pounds but they’re at least 5.

The pluses of chicken-sizing

So I’ve gotten into way better shape than I expected. And I’ve come to realize there are some big advantages to chicken-sizing over regular exercising:

Failure is not an option: You cannot make up an excuse not to work out. You can’t put on your chicken-size clothes, sit around for 30 minutes and decide, “Oh, I’ll just do it tomorrow.” The ladies depend on you and need care every single morning and every single night. And if you don’t do it, they might die. They could be eaten by raccoons or skunks (who eat their heads, drink their blood and discard their bodies). Or they could dehydrate or freeze to death. The stakes are just too high.

And so you do it. Twice a day. Every. Single. Day. And it becomes so routine, so habitual that you don’t even realize you’re exercising. The task is part of your life, similar to going to the bathroom. You don’t put it on your calendar. You just do it. (Yes, some mornings early in this new regimen you curse the fact that you bought 15 chickens, but that sentiment passes after a few months).

You don’t have to change clothes: What a huge time saver! But also, cutting out that simple step makes it so much easier to actually get up and do the task. As all the habit experts say, “Make it easy!”

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You always have a workout partner: In my case, I have 15. Sure, their brains are the size of two peanuts. But they are happy to see me — oh so happy. Every morning and evening, they cheer on my chicken-size routine with gusto! Squawk. Bah-Baaaahk!

And if I need a break, I can pick up a chicken and snuggle her soft feathers. Often it’s a white bird named Marshmallow. Talk about a feel-good, in-the-moment, five-senses experience. Sure, snuggling a hen isn’t quite the same as a dose of Lexapro, but twice a day, it comes pretty close. (

(One of my friends asked me the other day if I do “self-care,” and I said, “No.” And she responded in the funniest way. “Yes, you do. You raise chickens.”}

And there’s an added bonus that no gym workout will provide. Eggs! Holy moly, eggs! The best eggs you’ve ever eaten in your life. Some days I sit at the breakfast table and just marvel at how good these eggs taste. Or I’ll stare at our egg rack on the kitchen counter and appreciate the color of the beautiful shells.

Just this morning, I fried one egg for myself and one for my daughter. As we sliced into the golden-orange yolk, she said, “Whose is this one?”

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“Oh, that’s Marshmallow’s,” I said. “She’s so amazing. Thank you, Marshmallow.” And thank you, chicken-sizing.

Given all these wonderful aspects of chicken-sizing, I wondered if Esther Ngumbi missed raising chickens or fetching water at the river.

“I do miss it,” she says with a sigh. “But some of it, I don’t miss,” she counters. “For example, sometimes I had to wake up early in the morning, and it was so cold.”

So maybe chicken-sizing is so great because it gives me purpose but I don’t actually have to do it. My family would still eat if I forget to close their cage one night and a skunk comes to decapitate them.

In other words, maybe chicken-sizing is a sweet spot between moving all day because your livelihood depends on it and moving only because your body sits down all day.

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Ngumbi agrees. “Yes, maybe there is a sweet spot to exercising,” she says. “I actually really enjoyed going to fetch water at dusk. It was so refreshing with the cool evening breeze. It just all of a sudden relaxed you. So I felt like I was meditating while walking” — meditating, weightlifting and accomplishing a necessary task of life.

Science journalist MIchaeleen Doucleff is the author of Hunt, Gather, Parent: What Ancient Cultures Can Teach Us About the Lost Art of Raising Happy, Helpful Little Humans.

Copyright 2024 NPR

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Why The Bulgarian Split Squat Is A Must-Add To Your Workout Routine? Expert Answers

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Why The Bulgarian Split Squat Is A Must-Add To Your Workout Routine? Expert Answers

Why The Bulgarian Split Squat Is A Must-Add To Your Workout Routine? Expert Answers (Image Credits: iStock)

The Bulgarian split squat has garnered significant attention in the fitness regime of many fitness enthusiasts for its effectiveness in building strength, stability, and muscle definition. This single-leg exercise, which involves elevating the rear foot on a bench while performing a squat with the other leg, offers a unique challenge and numerous benefits that make it a must in many workout routines. But what is it? A Bulgarian Split Squat (BSS) is a variation of the traditional squat exercise that targets the legs, glutes, and core muscles. It is a unilateral exercise, meaning it works one leg at a time and is known for its ability to improve strength, balance, and flexibility.

We got in touch with Dr Seema Grover, Head of Department, Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation, Indraprastha Apollo Hospitals who shares types of Bulgarian Split Squats, benefits of it and the right way to do it.

Types Of Bulgarian Split Squats:

Dr Seema Grover shares that there are three types of Bulgarian Split Squats:

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1. Bodyweight BSS: Performed without any additional weight, this version is great for beginners or those focusing on technique.

2. Weighted BSS: Uses dumbbells, kettlebells, or a barbell to increase the intensity and challenge.

3. Pistol BSS: A more advanced version where the back leg is lifted off the ground, requiring more balance and control.

Benefits of Bulgarian Split Squats:

Dr Seema Grover shares the health benefits of Bulgarian Split Squats includes:

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1. Improved leg strength: Targets quadriceps, hamstrings, glutes, and calves.

2. Enhanced balance and coordination: Requires engagement of core muscles and balance control.

3. Increased flexibility: Stretches the hip flexors and quadriceps.

4. Functional strength: Mimics movements used in everyday life, like getting up from a chair or climbing stairs.

The Right Way to Do a Bulgarian Split Squat:

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1. Start with proper stance: Stand with feet shoulder-width apart, facing away from a bench or step.

2. Place back leg: Rest the back leg on the bench, keeping the knee bent at a 90-degree angle.

3. Lower body: Slowly lower the front leg, keeping the back leg straight, until the back knee almost touches the ground.

4. Push back: Drive through the front heel to return to standing.

5. Alternate legs: Complete reps on both legs.

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Mistakes to Avoid:

To make the most of this exercise, Dr Seema Grover shares some tips to keep in mind to avoid any mistakes:

1. Letting the back leg touch the ground: Keep it lifted to maintain proper form.

2. Not lowering far enough: Aim for a depth where the back knee almost touches the ground.

3. Using momentum: Control the movement with your leg muscles, not by swinging your body.

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4. Not engaging core: Keep your core muscles activated to maintain balance and stability.

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