Adding the Superman exercise to your workout regimen can help target key core muscles along your posterior chain.

Plus, all you need to perform the Superman is some floor space, making it an easy addition to any strength routine.

And who doesn’t want a strong core? After all, a solid midsection not only looks good, but it can also help reduce your risk of back pain.

But if you limit your core work to crunches, leg raises, and other abs-focused exercises, you’re shortchanging your results.

That’s because you’re neglecting many other muscles that are essential for building a strong and balanced core.

Superman Exercise: Step-by-Step Instructions

  • Lie face-down on the floor with your arms extended in front of you (palms down) and your legs extended behind you. This is the starting position.
  • Keeping your neck in line with your spine, lift your arms, chest, and legs off the floor.
  • Pause, then lower your arms and legs back to the starting position.

How to Make the Superman Exercise Easier

Keep your legs on the floor. Only lift your chest and arms.

How to Make the Superman Exercise Harder

Hold the top position for longer. For an added challenge, sweep your arms down to your sides, and then back above your head during each rep.

Bonus Tips for Doing the Superman Exercise

The key to performing this exercise safely and effectively is to engage both your glutes and your lower back simultaneously, says Trevor Thieme, CSCS, Beachbody’s executive director of fitness and nutrition content.

Don’t rely too much on either one.

Benefits of the Superman Exercise

Don’t be fooled by how simple the Superman exercise seems; this move is as effective as it is accessible.

Although it targets your erector spinae (a group of muscles located along your spine), it can also help strengthen your glutes when performed correctly.

“Strengthening these posterior core muscles can not only improve your posture and lower your risk of back pain, but it can also help reduce imbalances in your core caused by focusing too intently on your ‘six-pack’ muscle,” says Thieme.

The result is a core that looks good and is better able to perform its primary job: supporting your spine.

Muscles Worked by the Superman Exercise

Erector spinae

The erector spinae is a group of muscles (the spinalis, longissimus, and iliocostalis) that flank your spine on either side.

These muscles bear the important task of keeping your spine erect while also helping you rotate and bend from side to side, Thieme says.

Glutes

glute muscle anatomy | do squats make your butt look bigger

Three muscles make up your glutes: gluteus maximus, gluteus medius, and gluteus minimus.

Their primary job is hip extension (i.e., straightening your hips), making them important for everything from walking and running to squatting and jumping.

They also rotate your thighs inward and outward.