Best Abs Exercises for Mass — Top 10 Ranked
Building abs size requires the right exercise selection. Not all abs exercises are created equal — some are dramatically better for muscle building than others. We ranked these based on muscle activation, progressive overload potential, and how well they match the 8-12 reps rep range that muscle building training demands.
Exercises are ranked by: (1) Abs muscle activation percentage, (2) compatibility with 8-12 reps rep ranges, (3) progressive overload potential, and (4) injury safety at the required intensity.
The ab wheel rollout is an advanced anti-extension exercise that produces extreme abdominal activation. It challenges your core to resist spinal extension as you roll the wheel forward.
Key Form Cue
Kneel on a mat with the ab wheel on the floor in front of you.
The kettlebell windmill builds deep core stability and hip mobility by holding a kettlebell overhead while hinging laterally at the hip. It challenges the obliques, stabilizers, and shoulder under load through a full range of motion.
Key Form Cue
Press the kettlebell overhead with a locked elbow and keep your eyes on it throughout the movement.
The barbell rollout is an intense anti-extension core exercise using a loaded barbell on the floor. Kneel behind the barbell, grip it shoulder-width, and roll it forward until your body is nearly parallel to the ground before pulling back.
Key Form Cue
Load the barbell with round plates so it can roll freely on the floor.
The hollow body hold is a gymnastics-origin isometric exercise that trains total anterior core activation. Lie on your back and lift your arms, head, shoulders, and legs off the ground, maintaining a banana-shaped position under constant tension.
Key Form Cue
Lie on your back and press your lower back firmly into the floor — eliminate any gap.
The hanging leg raise is one of the most effective ab exercises. Hanging from a bar, you raise your legs by flexing your hips and curling your pelvis, targeting the entire rectus abdominis with emphasis on the lower portion.
Key Form Cue
Hang from a pull-up bar with a shoulder-width grip.
The cable woodchop trains rotational core power by pulling a cable diagonally across the body from high to low or low to high. It mimics athletic twisting movements and builds functional oblique strength.
Key Form Cue
Set the cable to the highest or lowest pulley position depending on chop direction.
The cable Pallof press with rotation extends the standard Pallof press by adding a controlled twist at full extension. This trains both anti-rotation stability and active rotational control of the core in one movement.
Key Form Cue
Set the cable at chest height and stand sideways to the machine with feet shoulder-width apart.
The kettlebell suitcase carry is a unilateral loaded carry that forces the obliques and quadratus lumborum to resist lateral flexion. Carry a single kettlebell at your side and walk without leaning, building deep anti-lateral core strength.
Key Form Cue
Hold a single kettlebell in one hand at your side with a firm grip.
The V-up is a bodyweight core exercise that simultaneously lifts the legs and torso to form a V shape at the top. It targets both the upper and lower abs through a full spinal flexion with hip flexion.
Key Form Cue
Lie flat on your back with arms extended overhead and legs straight on the floor.
Cable crunches allow progressive overload on the abs, which most bodyweight ab exercises cannot. Kneel in front of a high cable and crunch down, focusing on spinal flexion.
Key Form Cue
Kneel facing a high cable with a rope attachment behind your head.
Put these exercises into a real program
Revy's AI combines the best exercises for your goals into a personalized training program with progressive overload built in.