60 Minutes Beginner Back Workout with Kettlebell
A 60 minutes general fitness workout targeting your back using kettlebell equipment. 4 exercises, 12 total sets, designed for beginner lifters.
60 Minutes
Duration
12
Total Sets
8-15 reps
Rep Range
~630
Est. Calories
The Workout
Start with this as your primary movement. Warm up with 2 lighter sets first.
Form cues
- Stand over the kettlebell with feet wide and toes turned out.
- Hinge at the hips and grip the kettlebell handle with both hands.
- Drive through your heels and push the floor apart as you stand up.
Stand with feet slightly wider than shoulder-width, kettlebell on the floor in front of you.
Form cues
- Stand with feet slightly wider than shoulder-width, kettlebell on the floor in front of you.
- Hinge at the hips to grab the kettlebell, hiking it back between your legs.
- Explosively drive your hips forward to swing the kettlebell to chest height.
Stand in a wide sumo stance with two kettlebells between your feet.
Form cues
- Stand in a wide sumo stance with two kettlebells between your feet.
- Hinge at the hips, keep a flat back, and grab one kettlebell at a time.
- Row one kettlebell to your hip, lower it, then row the other side.
Finish strong — take the last set close to failure.
Form cues
- Stand over the kettlebell with feet shoulder-width apart.
- Hinge at the hips and bend your knees to grab the handle with both hands.
- Brace your core, flatten your back, and stand up by driving through your heels.
Why This Workout Works
This workout is built around the principles of general fitness training. Combine compound movements with moderate loads and moderate reps. Include a mix of push, pull, hinge, squat, and carry patterns each week. Add 2-3 days of cardio and prioritize mobility work. This is sustainable, long-term training.
Training Parameters
- Rep Range: 8-15 reps — designed for sustained muscular effort
- Rest Periods: 60-90 seconds — short rest to maximize calorie burn
- Sets Per Exercise: 3 sets — optimized for general fitness
Back Training Tips
- *Initiate every pull by squeezing your shoulder blades together — think about pulling with your elbows, not your hands.
- *Use straps on heavy rows so grip fatigue does not limit back development.
- *Include both vertical pulls (pulldowns, pull-ups) and horizontal pulls (rows) in your program.
Get this back workout personalized for you
Revy's AI will analyze your training history, recovery status, and strength levels to customize every set, rep, and weight for maximum general fitness results.