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The Biggest Muscle-Building Challenge You Face After 50

A significant barrier to muscle growth in individuals over 50 is their reluctance to engage in progressive resistance training. There’s a widespread misconception that aging requires one to avoid lifting weights, particularly heavy ones. Contrary to this belief, both scientific evidence and my extensive experience coaching thousands of clients over two decades confirm that strength training is crucial as we age beyond 50. Remarkably, building strength doesn’t always necessitate hefty weights at home. Alternative resistance tools like bands, kettlebells, dumbbells, and even bodyweight exercises can effectively promote muscle and strength gains. The key? Push these exercises to the point of technical failure—where maintaining proper form becomes challenging—to ensure the resistance effectively builds strength and muscle, maximizing workout benefits.
Why Home Workouts Can Beat the Gym

Bodyweight training offers the distinct advantage of unparalleled accessibility. You are unshackled by the need for equipment, specific locations, or strict schedules. When performed with proper technique and intensity, bodyweight exercises can stimulate the muscle and strength development this age group requires. The body is indifferent to resistance forms—be it a barbell or your own weight. For bodyweight workouts to rival those with gym equipment, they must be executed with technical skill, approach failure, and incorporate sufficient intensity and volume to trigger strength and muscle adaptation.
5 Home Exercises to Build Muscle After 50
Bodyweight Squats

Execution Guide: Begin with feet shoulder-width apart, toes angled slightly outward. Shift your hips backward and bend your knees to lower into a squat, maintaining a neutral spine and full-body control. Press your feet firmly against the ground to rise, engaging your glutes, hamstrings, and quads at the peak, and repeat.
How often: 2-3x/week.
Easier version for beginners: Use hand assist if you cannot bodyweight squat.
Common mistakes: Rounding the back, bending at the hips only, and loss of foot position.
Push Ups

How to do it: Place your hands shoulder width apart, legs straight, body tensioned and gripping the ground actively. With a neutral spine and straight line of the body, push your hands into the ground, straightening the elbows and drive your chest away from the floor. Lower the same way you went up under control.
How often: 2-3x/week.
Easier version for beginners: Elevate the hands.
Common mistakes: Hyperextension of the lower back (loss of core control).
Pull Ups

How to do it: Get your hands on a sturdy pull up bar, or elevated surface you can hang from. Keep an active core with alignment at the spine and lower body. Drive your chin up over the bar, and lower under control.
How often: 2-3x/week.
Easier version for beginners: Use a lower angle of pull, more like an inverted row.
Common mistakes: Rounding the back, momentum from the legs, loss of core control.
Step Ups

How to do it: Setup an elevated surface 12-16 inches high. Step up onto the surface with one foot, and step up utilizing your quads, glutes and hamstrings. Lower slowly under control and repeat for the opposite side.
How often: 2-3x/week.
Easier version for beginners: Use hand assist if you cannot step up fully. Lower step also works.
Common mistakes: Pushing up with bottom foot, taking muscle emphasis away from top working leg.
Reverse Lunges
How to do it: Start in a standing position, then step behind you with one leg, lowering down into a lunge with knee and hip hinging simultaneously. The back knee will graze the floor and then step back up into the starting position, utilizing your quads and glutes.
How often: 2-3x/week.
Easier version for beginners: Use hand assist if you cannot bodyweight reverse lunge.
Common mistakes: Loss of balance, spinal neutral, and coordination.
How to Structure Your Weekly Routine
You can place these 5 movements into a functional strength circuit training them all for a duration of time, but preferable to failure with a rest period between. They can also be trained individually in 2-4 straight sets to failure with 1-min rest between.
The Role of Protein and Recovery
Protein is pivotal. Shoot for 0.8-1.2 grams of protein per pound of bodyweight.
What Results You Can Expect
You can absolutely shift your body composition in 2-3 months of regular, consistent training with hard work behind it. The amount of muscle gained or fat lost? Will depend on your nutrition, your quality of training, and your recovery.
Getting Started If You’re New to Home Workouts
Embrace the change. It will be different than a gym-based workout, but different doesn’t mean worse. Finding a consistent routine with low barriers of entry is the goal here.
Dr. Rusin is the author of Pain-Free Performance: Move Better, Train Smarter, and Build an Unbreakable Body.
Dr. John Rusin, DPT, CSCS, CISSN, PPSC