Exercises by Muscle Group

Explore LIFE FIT’s exercise library by muscle group and equipment type. Each guide covers proper form, muscles worked, key benefits and variations to help you choose better exercises and train with confidence.

Use the filters below to narrow the exercise library and find the right exercises faster.

Browse by Muscle Group

Choose a muscle group to explore focused exercise guides, movement breakdowns and training cues without searching through the full library.

Browse by Equipment

Choose your equipment setup to find exercises that match the way you train, whether you work out at home or in a commercial gym.

Exercise Library

More Exercises

Showing 12 additional exercise guides from a total of 34

Exercise FAQs

Answers to common exercise library questions

These quick answers can help you use the library more effectively, choose better exercises and understand key training terms.

Start with the muscle group you want to improve, then build around a small mix of compound and isolation exercises. Choose movements that match your current training level, available equipment, and weekly routine instead of trying to do everything at once.
Many of them are, but not every movement is ideal as a starting point. Use the difficulty filter to find beginner-friendly exercises first, and focus on controlled form, stable setups, and manageable loads before progressing.
You can browse exercises by equipment directly from the equipment section on this page, then use the filters below to narrow the guide list further. This makes it easier to find movements that match your home setup or gym floor access.
Compound exercises train multiple joints and muscle groups in one movement, while isolation exercises focus more directly on one target muscle. A good training plan usually uses both, with compounds for overall strength and isolations for focused muscle work.
Beginners usually do best with a balanced foundation: legs, chest, back, shoulders, and core. Instead of specializing too early, prioritize basic full-body patterns and gradually add more focused muscle-group work as technique improves.
Both. Some guides are better suited to bodyweight or minimal-equipment home training, while others are built around gym machines, cables, benches, or free weights. The equipment browse section helps you find the setup that fits your environment.