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4 ‘Great’ Standing Exercises For Toning Your Back And Sides, According To Trainers: Woodchoppers, More

January 26, 2026 by Mariam Qayum

 
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You don’t always need a gym or a mat to tone your back and sides. Standing exercises can effectively target your obliques, core, and back muscles, making them perfect for home workouts. Here are four top moves, explained by trainers along with instructions and insights on why they work.

1. Standing Marches

Standing marches are a simple yet effective way to engage your core while improving coordination.

To do this exercise, stand tall with your feet hip-width apart and arms at your sides. Engage your core and lift your right knee to hip height while swinging your left arm forward. Lower and repeat on the opposite side, maintaining a controlled, rhythmic motion.

Fitness content creator Sara Cervantes, a trainer who incorporates this move into her routines, emphasizes that it’s “a great exercise for practicing balance and coordination” and recommends three sets of 15 marches. The movement forces your rectus abdominis, transversus abdominis, and obliques to stabilize your body, which helps to tone and tighten the waistline. The benefit goes beyond coordination: lifting the knees while engaging the arms recruits multiple core muscles while gently boosting your heart rate.

2. Deadlifts

Deadlifts are a full-body powerhouse, targeting the lower back, glutes, hamstrings, and core.

To perform a deadlift, stand with feet hip-width apart, holding dumbbells or a barbell in front of your thighs. Hinge at the hips, keeping your back straight, and lower the weights toward the floor until you feel a stretch in your hamstrings. Engage your glutes and core to return to standing, keeping your chest lifted and shoulders back. 

Andrew White, a NASM-certified personal trainer and the co-founder of garagegympro.com, explains that “deadlifts are a powerhouse exercise that not only works the lower back but also targets the hamstrings, glutes, and core. Proper form is key here to prevent injury and maximize effectiveness. Deadlifts are great for strengthening the lower back, improving posture, and engaging the muscles along the spine and the lower part of the midsection.”

This makes deadlifts an essential move for anyone looking to tone and sculpt while building overall strength.

3. Woodchoppers

Woodchoppers are excellent for sculpting the obliques and the sides of your torso while working the back and shoulders.

Begin by holding a dumbbell, medicine ball, or resistance band with both hands. Start with the weight above your right shoulder, then twist your torso and swing the weight diagonally across your body to the outside of your left hip, as if chopping wood. Return to the starting position and repeat, completing 12–15 reps per side.

The diagonal motion engages the obliques dynamically while promoting rotational strength, which helps stabilize the core and improve posture.

4. Side Leg Lifts with Reach

This move targets the obliques and strengthens the stabilizing muscles along your torso.

Stand with your feet hip-width apart and place your right hand on a wall or chair for balance. Lift your left leg straight out to the side while reaching your left arm overhead. Hold for 1–2 seconds, then lower and switch sides. Perform 12–15 reps per leg.

This exercise engages the side core muscles and improves lateral balance, creating a sculpted, lifted appearance along the waist and sides.

These standing exercises allow you to work multiple muscle groups at once while staying upright and active. White notes that moves like these not only tone your back and sides but also help strengthen the core in a functional way that supports everyday movement.

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