Intro
Strengthening your neck muscles is an overlooked part of a training regimen. It insulates you from injuries during high-impact activities, and affects your upper body aesthetics. With the right bodyweight exercises, you can build a strong and healthy neck without the need for any equipment. In this post, I'll go over best practices for safe and efficient progression in your neck training.
For Best Results
Neck and upper traps have a lot of overlap, I suggest training them both at the same time to maximize results. Make sure to stretch your neck and traps after exercising them to avoid being tense.
Important Things To Know
Progression for neck training should be focused on fatiguing the muscles rather than maximum load. Therefore, prioritize training volume, slowing tempo and pauses, increasing ROM, and shortening rest periods between sets.
If you do still wish to load the neck, a light resistance band and/or resistance from placing your hands on your head as muscular resistance is very simple and easy to implement. Add load very gradually. Here is an example
Highly advanced trainees can feel free to use small weight plates (2-6 kg), but if you're someone with a large and heavy head it's unlikely you'll ever need anything more than just bodyweight and perhaps a light band.
Gold Standard for Progression
Slow sets of 15-20 reps at a paused tempo of 1-3-1-1, perform all neck exercises as a giant set running through each exercise 1 time with no rest between for 2-4 rounds.
The majority of people, if they are strict with form and not allowing their neck to relax during the giant set, will find this quite challenging. If you still manage to progress beyond this, then you should consider adding load.
Neck Exercises
Regardless of the variation you use, make sure to train all the key movements of the neck like you would the muscles of your core: rotation, side bending, forward bending, and backward extending.
Front/Side of Neck Training
Neck Training Advanced (non-floor) Progressions,
Rear Neck Training:
Strengthening your neck muscles is an overlooked part of a training regimen. It insulates you from injuries during high-impact activities, and affects your upper body aesthetics. With the right bodyweight exercises, you can build a strong and healthy neck without the need for any equipment. In this post, I'll go over best practices for safe and efficient progression in your neck training.
For Best Results
Neck and upper traps have a lot of overlap, I suggest training them both at the same time to maximize results. Make sure to stretch your neck and traps after exercising them to avoid being tense.
Important Things To Know
- Equipment is not needed. The muscles of the neck are actually some of the easiest and most convenient to train, since you can do all the key exercises with no equipment, while either laying on the floor or hanging off the edge of a bed.
- This no-equipment style of neck workout was a staple of training for old-time strongmen and wrestlers such as Martin "Farmer" Burns, famous for a stunt where he survived hanging himself due to his absurd neck strength. I am not always one to claim that "old school" did it better, but in this case the old school athletes seemed to have figured it out. https://lastwordonsports.com/prowre...-farmer-burns-the-godfather-of-pro-wrestling/
- This should be obvious, but do not try to replicate that stunt.
- Neck bridges are not needed. Neck bridges put extra strain on the fragile vertebrae of your cervical spine, while being entirely unneeded to have consistent neck strength gains. They are uncomfortable, risky, and are harder to progress/regress than other options. Instead I'll be showing some much lower risk exercise options.
Progression for neck training should be focused on fatiguing the muscles rather than maximum load. Therefore, prioritize training volume, slowing tempo and pauses, increasing ROM, and shortening rest periods between sets.
If you do still wish to load the neck, a light resistance band and/or resistance from placing your hands on your head as muscular resistance is very simple and easy to implement. Add load very gradually. Here is an example
Highly advanced trainees can feel free to use small weight plates (2-6 kg), but if you're someone with a large and heavy head it's unlikely you'll ever need anything more than just bodyweight and perhaps a light band.
Gold Standard for Progression
Slow sets of 15-20 reps at a paused tempo of 1-3-1-1, perform all neck exercises as a giant set running through each exercise 1 time with no rest between for 2-4 rounds.
The majority of people, if they are strict with form and not allowing their neck to relax during the giant set, will find this quite challenging. If you still manage to progress beyond this, then you should consider adding load.
Neck Exercises
Regardless of the variation you use, make sure to train all the key movements of the neck like you would the muscles of your core: rotation, side bending, forward bending, and backward extending.
Front/Side of Neck Training
Neck Training Advanced (non-floor) Progressions,
Rear Neck Training: