Beginner Bodyweight Workout for Small Spaces: 5 Exercises, 20 Minutes, No Equipment

You don’t need much space to start working out — a 4×6 foot area and 20 minutes is enough for a complete beginner session. This routine covers all major muscle groups using only bodyweight movements that fit within that footprint. If you’re new to exercise or returning after a long break, start here.

Before You Start

Three things to check:

  • Clear the area of anything you can step on or bump into
  • Use a yoga mat or towel if the floor is hard or slippery
  • Have water nearby — you’ll need it

The 5-Exercise Circuit

These five exercises cover your legs, push muscles, posterior chain, core, and pulling muscles. They require nothing beyond your bodyweight and a 4×6 foot space.

Exercise 1: Bodyweight Squat

Feet shoulder-width, chest up. Lower until thighs are parallel to the floor (or as deep as comfortable). Drive through heels to return. This is the foundational lower body movement.

Beginner: 3 × 10 reps

If squatting to parallel is uncomfortable: Squat to a chair (sit lightly, stand back up) until mobility improves.

Exercise 2: Knee Push-Up

From a kneeling plank position, lower your chest toward the floor and press back up. Keep your body in a straight line from knees to head — no raised hips, no sagging core.

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Beginner: 3 × 8 reps

Progress to: Full push-up when you can complete 3 × 10 knee push-ups with perfect form.

Exercise 3: Glute Bridge

Lie on your back, feet flat and hip-width, knees bent. Drive hips upward, hold 2 seconds at the top, lower. Trains your glutes, hamstrings, and lower back stabilizers.

Beginner: 3 × 12 reps

Exercise 4: Standing Calf Raise

Hold a wall or chair for balance. Rise onto toes as high as possible, hold 1 second, lower fully. Full range matters more than speed.

Beginner: 3 × 15 reps

Exercise 5: Dead Bug

Lie on your back, arms pointing to ceiling, knees bent at 90°. Slowly lower one arm overhead and the opposite leg toward the floor while pressing your lower back flat. Return and switch sides. Trains deep core stability.

Beginner: 3 × 6 per side

The 20-Minute Session Plan

  • Warm-up (3 min): March in place → arm circles → hip circles → 5 slow squats
  • Circuit (15 min): Complete all 5 exercises back-to-back. Rest 20 sec between exercises, 75 sec between rounds. Do 3 rounds.
  • Cool-down (2 min): Standing quad stretch → seated hamstring stretch → deep breathing

Common Beginner Mistakes

  • Going too fast. Slow, controlled reps build more strength and are safer than rushing. If you’re bouncing through squats, slow down.
  • Skipping the cool-down. 2 minutes of stretching significantly reduces next-day soreness, especially in the first few weeks.
  • Stopping when sore. Mild soreness 24–48 hours after your first sessions is normal. Train through it (at lower intensity if needed) rather than waiting until you feel 100%.

Frequency and Progress

Start with 3 sessions per week with at least one day between each. After 2 weeks, progress by: adding 1–2 reps per exercise, or reducing rest between exercises to 15 sec, or moving to harder variations (full push-up, single-leg glute bridge). After 4–6 weeks of this routine, you’ll be ready for a more demanding beginner program.

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Written by

Sarah Mitchell

Sarah Mitchell is a NASM-certified personal trainer and fitness writer with 8 years of experience coaching home fitness. Sarah specializes in beginner programs, bodyweight training, and helping people build lasting fitness habits from the comfort of their own home.

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