The Turkish get-up offers a full-body exercise, We may earn commission from links on this page, but we only recommend products we back abs. with an emphasis on the core and shoulder, and teaches you to use full-body strength to go from a lying position on the floor to standing. While the move might sound intimidating—even watching someone perform the entire exercise can seem overwhelming—you can easily break it down step by step so you learn how to conquer the move.

That’s where this three-step Turkish get-up comes in handy, which Ebenezer Samuel, C.S.C.S., Men’s Health fitness director explains with the help of Runner’s World run coach and certified strength coach, Jess Movold. By focusing on the first three steps of the move, you still get the ab, shoulder, and glute engagement, while mastering the first half of the full exercise. You’ll see this move in the new 20-Minute Functional Core program, a collab between Runner’s World and Men’s Health, which is available in the All Out Studio app when you sign up for the Runner’s World+ premium membership.

Deputy Editor, Health & Fitness sit-up. It still provides spinal flexion, which means it hits those six-pack abs known as the rectus abdominis, Samuel says, but also puts an emphasis on the glutes—an important muscle group for runners looking to increase speed and gain power. It also targets shoulder stability, which can help support posture.

How to Do the 3-Step Turkish Get-Up

To add this three-step Turkish get-up to your next core routine, sub it in anytime you might do a sit-up. Here’s how to perform it properly:

  1. Lie faceup on floor. Hold a dumbbell in left hand, arm extended straight up over shoulder. Bend left knee and plant foot on floor. Extend right arm and leg straight out on floor, placed about 45 degrees from torso. This is your starting position.
  2. Using abs, sit up onto right forearm. Keep eyes on the dumbbell the entire time, and keep left arm close to face.
  3. Should You Run Before or After a Strength Workout.
  4. Engage glutes, press into left heel, and lift hips off floor. Pause here.
  5. Lower hips back down, then come back onto right forearm, and slowly lower torso back to floor to return to starting position.
  6. The Benefits of Kettlebells.
Headshot of Mallory Creveling
Mallory Creveling
Other Hearst Subscriptions

Mallory Creveling is an ACE-certified personal trainer and RRCA-certified run coach, who also holds multiple other fitness certifications and regularly stays on top of her continuing education in the field. She has more than a decade of experience covering fitness, health, and nutrition for a wide range of publications, and she has nearly 10 years of experience as a trainer and fitness instructor. Mallory stays on top of the latest science in wellness, has worked with some of the best experts in their medical fields, and regularly interviews researchers, trainers, athletes, and more to find the best advice for readers looking to improve their performance and well-being.

As a freelance writer, Mallory's work appeared in Women's Health, Self, Men's Journal, Reader's Digest, and more. She has also held staff editorial positions at Family Circle and Shape magazines, as well as DailyBurn.com. A former New Yorker/Brooklynite, she's now based in Easton, Pennsylvania.