The Best Compound Exercises for Fat Loss and Muscle
If you had to build a physique with only five exercises, you'd want the compound movements. They work the most muscle, burn the most calories, produce the strongest hormonal response, and build strength that transfers to real life. Here's everything you need to know about the most important exercises in your program.
What Makes a Movement "Compound"
A compound exercise involves multiple joints and multiple muscle groups simultaneously. A squat moves the ankle, knee, and hip — recruiting quads, hamstrings, glutes, and lower back. An isolation exercise (leg extension) moves only the knee, recruiting only the quads. More muscles working = more total work = more metabolic demand = more growth stimulus and more calorie burn.
The Big Five and Why Each Matters
1. The Squat
The king of lower body movements. Recruits quads, hamstrings, glutes, and spinal erectors. The back squat is the traditional version, but goblet squats, front squats, and Bulgarian split squats are all effective compound squat variations. After 40, prioritize depth and mechanics over ego weight.
2. The Deadlift
The most total-body movement in existence — involves over 600 muscles from feet to neck. Builds real-world pulling and carrying strength. Conventional, Romanian, and trap bar variations each have their place. The Romanian deadlift (RDL) is particularly valuable for posterior chain development with lower spinal stress.
3. The Bench Press / Push Pattern
The barbell bench press is the classic, but dumbbell pressing, incline pressing, and push-ups all train the horizontal push pattern: chest, shoulders, and triceps. Essential for upper body strength and shoulder health when programmed correctly with appropriate pulling volume.
4. The Row / Pull Pattern
For every push, you need a pull. Barbell rows, dumbbell rows, cable rows, and pull-ups train the back, biceps, and rear delts. Most people over-press and under-pull — chronic anterior shoulder dominance leads directly to shoulder pain and impingement. Pull at least as much as you push, ideally more.
5. The Overhead Press
Standing or seated dumbbell/barbell press trains shoulders, triceps, and upper back. It also demands full shoulder girdle stability and thoracic spine mobility — two things that decay without intentional training after 40.
Ken's framework: build your program around one primary compound movement per session. Everything else is accessory work. One squat variation, one hip hinge, one press, one pull — that's a complete, effective training program.
How to Use Them for Fat Loss
Compound movements are the most metabolically expensive exercises available. A set of heavy squats burns significantly more calories than a set of leg curls — and creates a much larger EPOC (excess post-exercise oxygen consumption) effect that keeps your metabolism elevated for hours afterward. For fat loss, prioritize compound movements, keep rest periods moderate (60–90 seconds), and use supersets (pairing a press with a pull) to increase training density.
Programming Recommendation
For most adults over 40: 3–4 sets of each primary compound movement, 6–12 reps, 2–3x per week. This is enough stimulus for growth and fat loss without overreaching recovery capacity.
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