Key facts
- Trains several muscles in one movement.
- Allows heavier loads and efficient workouts.
- Examples: squat, deadlift, bench press, row, pull-up.
- The backbone of most strength programs.
Compound exercises move more than one joint and recruit several muscle groups together. A squat, for instance, works the quads, glutes, hamstrings, and core simultaneously. Because so much muscle is involved, you can lift heavier and get a lot of stimulus from relatively few exercises.
This efficiency makes compounds the foundation of most effective programs: they build strength, drive overall muscle growth, and carry over to real-world movement. Isolation exercises then complement them by targeting specific muscles that need extra work.
Frequently asked questions
What are examples of compound exercises?
Squats, deadlifts, bench presses, overhead presses, rows, and pull-ups are classic compounds — each works multiple joints and muscle groups together.
Are compound exercises better than isolation exercises?
They're more efficient and build the most overall strength and muscle, so they form the base of a program. Isolation exercises still add value for targeting specific muscles.
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