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Tom’s Guide
Tom’s Guide
Technology
Sam Hopes

I did 70 plank tucks every day for a week - here are my results

Woman outdoors doing a high plank on the ground with buildings in the background

You can tackle plank tucks in many ways, but whatever approach you try, they’re a killer full-body exercise. I added to our ever-growing plank challenge repertoire at Tom’s Guide and did 70 reps a day for one week. 

If plank tucks haven’t entered your workout regime before, the exercise works your shoulders, arms, core muscles, hip flexors, lower back and legs. To do plank tucks, you’ll start in a plank position, jump both legs between your hands, then jump back again. But several variations fire up your core even more.

Along with some of the best plank variations we’ve tried, this one torched my muscles and ramped up my heart rate. If you plan to try them and haven’t before, I recommend speaking with a personal trainer to check your form. Here’s what happened when I hammered out nearly 500 reps — and ouch. 

How to do plank tucks

(Image credit: Shutterstock images)

There are other ways to try this, but the below method is arguably the most well-known plank tuck.

  • Start in a straight-arm plank position with shoulders stacked over your wrists
  • Engage your ab muscles, then bend your knees and begin to lean forward
  • Jump both feet between your hands, lifting your hips as you move
  • Keep your weight in the balls of your feet, then jump both feet back into your starting position.

As mentioned, your core muscles are the primary focus. The move hits your rectus abdominis, transverse abdominis (deeper core muscles) and internal and external obliques. But that's not all. You’ll also target your shoulders, arms, lower back, hip flexors and leg muscles. 

I did 70 plank tucks every day for a week — here are my results

Well, doing a plank every morning for a week surprised our fitness editor, so what would 70 plank tucks a day do? I decided to find out. 

Day 1

Plank tucks can form part of cardio training as jumping raises your heart rate. I felt puffed after 70 reps on day one, and my abs, hips and quads were firing on all cylinders. It’s similar to plank jacks but without lateral leg engagement. 

More than anything, I’ve got a limited range of motion during this exercise, and 70 reps took forever. Tall people (I’m 5”2, so I don’t qualify) and anyone with tight hip flexors or wrist pain might struggle with the jump forward on this one, but there are ways around it. 

Days 2 and 3

For the next few days, I headed to the gym and hit the TRX — suspension trainers offer a brilliant plank tuck variation if you need one. Stepping your feet through the handles and lowering them to plank height allows you to drive your knees toward your elbows from an elevated position; this helped me crunch my abs and draw my naval in without feeling restricted by a low starting position. 

Equally, you could elevate your arms with push-up bars instead — if you want to practice jumping. Balancing your feet on a stability ball is a popular option for torching your muscles and challenging coordination and core stability.

Days 4 and 5

By day four, it was time to mix it up again, as I had started to get bored. This time, I placed sliders underneath my feet and focused on driving my knees toward my elbows on the floor. To add further instability (which I instantly regretted), I then added a Plankpad underneath my shoulders (see the photo of when I started using a Plankpad every day below) and finished my reps with a wobble.

(Image credit: Sam Hopes)

The friction creates a slight drag as you tuck your knees toward your hands, putting the lower body through the wringer. I found my shoulders more active using this method, and I practiced squeezing every muscle group to guide the sliders forward without dropping my hips or dipping into my lower back. 

If you’re building a home gym full of the best home gym equipment, sliders are an affordable way to elevate various exercises like alligator crawls and moving bear planks. However, you could just as easily use a dishcloth or sweatshirt if you wanted.

Days 6 and 7

During the last few days, I decided to play around with time under tension (TUT), deliberately slowing down my movements to work my muscles harder for longer. I recommend only doing this if you need the extra engagement, but it helps me focus on expanding my breath and correcting form. If you struggle to control your breath, a 5-minute breathing exercise could help you bring awareness to it. 

Verdict

My hips were feeling tight by the end of the week. I love any exercise that targets the hip flexor muscles, as they’re some of the most underused and weak muscles in the human body, along with the glutes. 

I finished up my last day with this one move to reduce hip flexor pain — it’s my favorite lower back and hip stretch and the most underrated exercise in my books. But you should add mobility and stretching regularly to your exercise routine (several times a week), not just when you feel tight. 

We cover more Tom’s Guide-approved stretching exercises below.

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