Standard home workout guides assume full range of motion and grip strength — which leaves a lot of people behind. If you’re managing arthritis, a chronic injury, limited mobility, or age-related physical changes, this guide gives you specific modifications to build a real workout routine around what your body can actually do.
Important note: These modifications are starting points. Work with a physical therapist to apply them safely for your specific condition. This article does not replace professional medical advice.
Grip Problems: The First Fix for Upper Body Exercises
Dumbbell handles and pull-up bars assume full hand strength — which people with arthritis, carpal tunnel, or neuropathy often don’t have. Before giving up on upper body training, try these low-cost fixes:
- Foam pipe insulation over dumbbell handles — Available at hardware stores for about $3. Slipping it over the handle thickens the grip, which is dramatically easier on arthritic joints than thin metal.
- Lifting straps — Wrap around your wrist and the dumbbell, transferring work away from your hands. Useful for rows and deadlift-pattern movements.
- Loop resistance bands — Eliminate the need to grip entirely for many pulling exercises. Hook them around your forearm or wrist instead.
- Padded lifting gloves with wrist support ($15–$30) — Distribute pressure across the palm and reduce joint strain on thin metal handles.
Knee Pain: Lower Body Training That Doesn’t Load the Joint
Standard squats and lunges load the knee in ways that aggravate patellar tendinitis, meniscus issues, and osteoarthritis. These alternatives build real lower body strength with less knee stress:
- Seated resistance band leg extensions — Sit in a sturdy chair, loop a band around your ankle and a chair leg, and extend. Loads the quad with zero knee compression.
- Hip hinges with dumbbells or a band — Hinge at the hips rather than bending the knee. Builds hamstrings and glutes with minimal knee involvement.
- Standing hip abductions with a band — Loop a band around your thighs and step side to side. Targets glutes without loading the knee joint.
- Calf raises on a step — Builds lower leg strength and supports bone density with very low knee demand.
If you can use a stationary bike, a recumbent model positions the knee in a less compressed angle than an upright bike — a meaningful difference for many knee conditions.
Shoulder Limitations: Upper Body Training Without Overhead Loading
Shoulder impingement, rotator cuff tears, and frozen shoulder make overhead pressing dangerous. You can still train your upper body with these alternatives:
- Seated resistance band rows — Anchor a band at chest height in a door, sit facing it, and pull toward your torso. Works the entire upper back without raising the arm overhead.
- Face pulls with a band — Anchor at face height, pull toward your forehead with elbows flared. One of the few exercises that actively helps shoulder health rather than worsening it.
- Floor press — A dumbbell press on the floor limits the range of motion at the shoulder (no arm drop below the body), making it safer than a bench press for many shoulder conditions.
- Bicep curls with elbow braced at the side — No shoulder involvement required if the upper arm stays stationary.
Limited Mobility: Seated and Floor-Based Options
If standing exercises aren’t currently feasible due to balance issues, wheelchair use, or post-surgical recovery, seated and floor-based training is a legitimate starting point — not a lesser version of real exercise.
A chair-based routine can cover upper body pushing and pulling, core activation, and partial lower body work. The National Center on Health, Physical Activity and Disability (NCHPAD) publishes free adaptive exercise resources — including seated video routines — that are substantially more useful for this population than general fitness content.
For floor-based core work that requires no upper body weight-bearing:
- Dead bugs — Lying on your back, alternate extending opposite arm and leg while keeping your lower back flat
- Glute bridges — Lying on your back, press hips up and hold at the top
- Leg raises — Lying flat, lift and lower both legs together with control
The Three Pieces of Equipment Worth Buying First
For most people managing physical limitations, these provide the most benefit at the lowest joint cost:
- Resistance bands with handles ($20–$40) — Versatile, joint-friendly, adjustable resistance. The single highest-value adaptive fitness purchase.
- A door anchor for bands ($8–$12) — Converts resistance bands into a cable machine substitute at multiple heights.
- Light adjustable dumbbells (5–25 lb) — Many upper body exercises are accessible at lower weights with correct form.
Avoid investing in heavy barbells or complex machines until you’ve established which movement patterns work safely for your specific situation.
Work with a Physical Therapist
A single session with a physical therapist familiar with adaptive exercise can eliminate months of trial and error. Ask specifically what movement patterns are safe — and which to prioritize — for your condition. Telehealth PT has made this more accessible, and many insurance plans cover at least an initial evaluation.
The goal isn’t to train around your limitations indefinitely — it’s to build capacity, reduce pain, and gradually expand what’s possible. Start where you are.