featured-image

Bodyweight workouts deserve a spot in everyone's fitness routine. Widely accessible and perfect for on-the-go training, they can challenge your muscular endurance if you power through enough reps and get your heart pumping if you're moving with enough speed. But if you have your sights set on gaining muscle or building strength in the movement patterns you practice every day, you'll want to prioritize dumbbell workouts, too.

As a whole, resistance training with external loads (e.g., free weights, weight machines) has been found to improve joint range of motion (per a 2023 study in the journal Sports Medicine ), enhance strength and muscle mass (according to a 2019 review of 30 studies), the latter of which begins to decline as early as age 30, and support bone health (as reported in the journal Endocrinology and Metabolism ).



And dumbbell training is particularly valuable; the equipment is versatile enough to use for most exercises in your routine, including moves that challenge your body in multiple planes of motion — laterally, forward, backward, and rotationally. In other words, a dumbbell workout can easily be a functional workout . Not sure how to make the most of your free weights? Try this three-day dumbbell workout plan, designed to encourage muscle growth (aka hypertrophy) with challenging-but-doable loads, less than a dozen reps, and just enough rest time.

Each session hits your upper- and lower-body muscles in "push" and "pull" movement patterns, so the exercises mimic the motions your body goes through in real life. Many of the moves included are compound exercises , meaning they target multiple muscle groups and call on multiple joints at once, so you can get all the benefits of dumbbell workouts in less time. To help you build a strong foundation, each session starts with a dedicated core exercise.

Here's how it works. The 3-Day Dumbbell Workout Plan That Hits Every Major Muscle Group Before you dive into the dumbbell workout plan each day, spend five to 10 minutes warming up your muscles and joints with a few rounds of dynamic moves like cat-cow, thread the needle, hip and shoulder CARs, bodyweight squats, and ankle rocks. When you're feeling ready to go, perform the daily workout circuit-style, doing one set of all five exercises before repeating it from the top.

Do the entire circuit three times. For each set, aim to complete 8 to 12 reps of the exercise using a moderate weight; your effort level (aka rating of perceived exertion) should feel like a 6.5 to 8 out of 10.

In between moves, rest for 30 to 90 seconds — this should feel like enough time to shake off any fatigue without letting your muscles fully recover. Make sure to space out the three workouts to allow for 24 to 48 hours of recovery in between sessions. As the weeks go on, do a little check-in.

If you're able to bang out 12 reps with no problem after three weeks of following the dumbbell workout plan, take that as a sign to try a slightly heavier set of weights. Here, the three-day dumbbell workout plan, including an in-depth breakdown of how to perform each move, along with images to help you check your form. Day 1 Day one of this dumbbell workout plan takes your body through a handful of fundamental movement patterns — push, pull, squat, and hinge.

It also challenges the muscles on the front and back sides of your body, which helps to prevent muscle imbalances that can contribute to discomfort or, ultimately, injury. Do 8 to 12 reps. Switch sides; repeat.

Do 8 to 12 reps. Do 8 to 12 reps. Do 8 to 12 reps.

Do 8 to 12 reps. Switch sides; repeat. Day 2 On Day 2 of this dumbbell workout plan, you'll practice single-leg and -arm exercises that mimic real-life actions: you quickly step out to the side to step around a massive puddle (aka a lateral lunge), and you hinge forward to grab a sweater out of the laundry basket as you brush your teeth (aka a single-arm row).

The core exercise — a superman — targets the muscles on the backside of your body, including the erector spinae, which stabilize and mobilize the lower spine and help keep you upright as you walk or jog. Do 8 to 12 reps. Do 8 to 12 reps each, alternating sides.

Do 8 to 12 reps. Switch sides; repeat. Do 8 to 12 reps.

Switch sides; repeat. Do 8 to 12 reps. Day 3 Day 3 of the dumbbell workout plan includes moves that require a little coordination.

You'll simultaneously curl your set of dumbbells as you lunge, training your biceps and your legs. And the wood chop — a rotational core exercise — will require your upper and lower body to move in sync. Do 8 to 12 reps.

Switch sides; repeat. Do 8 to 12 reps. Do 8 to 12 reps.

Do 8 to 12 reps. Do 8 to 12 reps. Switch sides; repeat.

Megan Falk is an experienced health and wellness journalist and editor whose work has been published by PS, Shape, Livestrong, Women's Health, Well+Good, mindbodygreen, Wide Open Spaces, and other outlets. She has served as an editor on Equinox's content team and at Shape, where she primarily covered exercise tips, fitness modalities, workout trends, and more..

Back to Health Page