Update Consent

Does Glute Activation Work to Build Muscle?

This Is the 4-Move, 5-Minute Bodyweight Glute Warmup That Got Me My Best Butt Ever

I'm 90 percent sure that, up until a few months ago, I had a case of dormant butt syndrome. It wasn't always that way; in college, I biked and walked everywhere while working out six days a week, rarely sitting for more than an hour at a time. After graduation, that changed. I was sitting all the time: at my desk, in the car, at dinner. I tried to compensate by going harder in my workouts and runs, even using a standing desk for hours at a time. But despite my best efforts, my glutes paid the price, quickly losing muscle tone and strength.

After a year and a half of this frustration, I decided to try something new: glute activation. It was essentially an extra warmup that focused solely on "waking up" my glute muscles before a workout, ensuring that they'd get the highest possible benefit of the exercise. The four moves were easy to slip into my warmup routine and only took about five minutes to complete — a low cost for potentially big gains. I started activating my glutes before every strength workout, about three times a week.

Within a couple of weeks, I started seeing results: my butt was noticeably tighter, more lifted, and more toned. The turnaround time was actually shocking; I wasn't sure whether this change, simple as it was, would work at all, and I definitely didn't expect it to happen so fast. The fact that all it took was a five-minute warmup circuit of bodyweight exercises — moves anyone, anywhere can do — made the surprise all the more pleasant.

You can activate your glutes with several different moves (here's the full list), but I chose just four, sometimes three if I was short on time. I did two rounds of 10 to 12 reps for each move, completing them after a short dynamic warmup and four ab activation exercises. Sound simple? It is, and judging by my results, it's effective, too. Ahead, see the moves I did and add them to your warmup to tone and strengthen your butt.

Image Source: Getty / Hiraman

1. Traditional Bridge Exercise

  • On your mat, lie on your back with your knees bent and feet flat on the floor. Be sure to keep your feet underneath your knees, not in front. Plant your palms by each side, face down.
  • Raise your hips up to the ceiling, tensing your abs and squeezing your butt as you do. You should be making a long diagonal line with your body, from shoulders to knees.
  • Hold for a few seconds, making sure your spine doesn't round and your hips don't sag. Keep your abs and butt muscles engaged.
  • Lower down to the ground; this is considered one rep. Complete two sets of 10 reps.
Image Source: POPSUGAR Studios

2. Fire Hydrant

  • Start on all fours with your hands directly under your shoulders and your knees directly under your hips.
  • Keep your right knee at a 90-degree angle as you slowly raise your leg to the right until it is parallel to the ground. Avoid lifting your right hip, as you should keep both hips squared toward the floor.
  • With control, lower your leg back to the ground.
  • This counts as one rep. Complete two sets of 10 reps on each leg.
Image Source: POPSUGAR Photography

3. Donkey Kicks

  • Start on all fours, with your hands directly under your shoulders and your knees directly under your hips.
  • Keep your right knee at a 90-degree angle as you slowly raise your leg behind you until your thigh is almost parallel to the floor. Pulse your flexed foot toward the ceiling by squeezing your glutes. Your back should remain perfectly still in a neutral spine. The motion should be small and controlled with your muscle doing the work, not momentum.
  • Return to start position to complete one rep. Complete two sets of 10 reps on each leg.
Image Source: POPSUGAR Photography

Want More?

POPSUGAR Would Like To Send You Push Notifications.