Share and Follow
Body metrics like BMI and weight don’t fully represent how well your body operates. According to Amanda Dvorak, a certified personal trainer at Garage Gym Reviews, movement challenges are more indicative of maintaining balance, control, and strength as you age. Therefore, knowing the key exercises to perform at age 60 gives insight into whether your physical fitness surpasses that of much younger individuals.
Dr. Becca Jordre, a physical therapist with the National Senior Games Association, highlights that movement-involving measures address the essential challenge of functionality. “While this is crucial for older adults, it’s also applicable to younger ones,” she asserts. “We can make assumptions about someone’s capabilities using tools like X-rays or muscle tests, but it’s movement challenges that reveal true abilities, considering neurological control, pain, skill, and even motivation.”
Movement challenges are said to be strong indicators of both fitness levels and long-term independence, according to Caine Wilkes, an Olympian and certified USA weightlifting coach at BarBend.
“Aside from a few competitive athletes, after 60, it’s less about how much you can lift or how fast you can run, but about how well you can move so it can carry over into having a solid quality of life and longevity in your later years,” he explains. “Movement challenges can show how well your body performs in real-life tasks as simple as getting up, staying balanced, or handling your own body weight.”
Below, the experts share four moves that show your body’s fitter than people half your age at 60.
Sit To Stand Test

“This is a test that determines how fast you can stand up and sit down five times without your hands,” Dr. Jordre notes. “Historically, it has been linked to predicting mobility disability, and falls in older adults. It relates closely to sport performance in older athletes. This test requires lower body strength, power, and dynamic balance to move quickly and the way you move tells a physical therapist a lot about where you might have challenges.”
- Place a chair of standard height against a wall for support.
- Begin seated tall near the edge of the chair.
- Stand up completely.
- Sit back down with control and without using your hands.
- Do this 5 times.
Bodyweight Squat

“The [bodyweight] squat shows lower-body strength and joint range,” Amanda explains.
- Stand tall with your feet shoulder-width apart on the floor.
- Extend your arms ahead of you or place your hands on your hips.
- Bend at the knees and hips as you lower into a squat.
- Descend until your thighs are parallel to the floor.
- Press through your heels to rise back up to standing.
Half-Kneel-To-Stand

“The half-kneel-to-stand tests coordination, strength, and how easily someone can move between levels, which is a real-world skill that gets harder with age,” Amanda explains.
- Begin in a half-kneeling position with one knee on the ground and the other foot planted in front.
- Maintain a tall posture and engaged core.
- Lean a bit forward into your front foot, pressing into that heel.
- Drive through your front leg to stand up, without using your hands for support.
- Use control to lower to the half-kneeling position.
Bear Crawl
“The bear crawl performed with the body low to the ground tests coordination, shoulder stability, hip mobility, and core strength,” Caine says. “Plus, it’s a challenge.”
- Begin in a quadrupod position with your knees under your hips and your hands under your shoulders.
- Lift your knees a few inches off the ground.
- Maintain a flat back and engage your core.
- Move your left hand and right foot forward.
- Then, move your right hand and left foot forward.
- Continue to crawl.
Alexa Mellardo