Best Calves Exercises for Mass — Top 10 Ranked
Building calves size requires the right exercise selection. Not all calves 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) Calves muscle activation percentage, (2) compatibility with 8-12 reps rep ranges, (3) progressive overload potential, and (4) injury safety at the required intensity.
The barbell calf raise places a barbell on your back for heavy calf loading without needing a dedicated machine. Stand on a raised surface with the bar on your traps, lower your heels below the platform, and drive up onto your toes for a full calf contraction.
Key Form Cue
Place the barbell on your upper traps and stand with the balls of your feet on a raised surface.
The deficit calf raise maximizes range of motion by using a high step or plate stack to allow the heels to drop well below the toes. This extended stretch under load is the key stimulus for calf hypertrophy that flat-ground calf raises miss.
Key Form Cue
Stand on the edge of a high step or stacked plates with only the balls of your feet on the surface.
The standing calf raise targets the gastrocnemius (the visible calf muscle) through plantarflexion. It requires a full range of motion with a deep stretch at the bottom for maximum growth.
Key Form Cue
Stand on a raised surface (calf raise machine, step, or Smith machine) with the balls of your feet on the edge.
The seated calf raise targets the soleus — the muscle underneath the gastrocnemius. Because the knee is bent, the gastrocnemius is taken out of the equation, isolating the soleus for complete calf development.
Key Form Cue
Sit in the machine with the pad on your lower thighs, balls of your feet on the platform.
The donkey calf raise is an old-school bodybuilding exercise that puts the calves under a deep stretch at the bottom. The bent-over position stretches the gastrocnemius more than standing raises.
Key Form Cue
Stand on a raised surface with the balls of your feet on the edge.
Single-leg calf raises double the load on each calf compared to bilateral raises and fix side-to-side imbalances. They can be done anywhere with a step and something to hold for balance.
Key Form Cue
Stand on one foot on a raised surface with the ball of your foot on the edge.
Using the Smith machine for calf raises allows heavy loading with perfect balance, letting you focus entirely on the calf contraction without worrying about stabilization.
Key Form Cue
Set the bar on your upper traps and stand on a raised surface (step or plates).
The dumbbell calf raise is the most accessible calf exercise, requiring only dumbbells and a step. Hold dumbbells at your sides, stand on a step with your heels hanging off, and perform calf raises with a full stretch and full contraction.
Key Form Cue
Hold a dumbbell in each hand and stand with the balls of your feet on an elevated surface.
The kettlebell calf raise uses one or two kettlebells held at your sides for simple, effective calf loading. The compact kettlebell shape keeps the weight close to your body, making balance easier than with dumbbells at heavier loads.
Key Form Cue
Hold a kettlebell in each hand at your sides and stand on an elevated surface.
The Smith machine single-leg calf raise doubles the load per calf and addresses left-right imbalances with the safety of a guided bar path. Stand on one foot on a platform under the bar and perform full-range calf raises.
Key Form Cue
Set the bar on your upper traps and stand on one foot on a raised platform.
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.