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These 12 Rowing Machine Workouts Will Build Cardio and Smash Fat

Bored with your cardio routine? Ramp up your heart rate and smash fat with these rowing workouts instead.

FOR SOME PEOPLE, the cardio section of the gym floor is best understood as one of the circles of hell. The treadmills, ellipticals, and stationary bikes are all seen as instruments of torture and weapons of destruction trainers use for cruel and unusual punishment. Toiling away on these implements is simultaneously painful and dreadfully boring. But including some form of cardio is important for balanced training routines—so how can someone who hates it get more from their workout? The answer: using a rowing machine. C Purlin Roll Forming Machine

These 12 Rowing Machine Workouts Will Build Cardio and Smash Fat

Rowing machines provide a more engaging experience compared to other cardio machines. They're easier on the joints than treadmills (and especially outdoor running), since you won't have to pound the track with every footfall. When you row, you're also using more of your body. Good rowing form (more on that shortly) engages both the lower body, with a powerful leg drive, and the upper body, with the big pulling muscles in your back. Pile on enough strokes, and you're able to raise your heart rate while challenging your muscles.

More and more people are hopping on rowers, too— the number of people who do indoor rowing workouts rose nearly 20 percent from 2014 to 2021, according to the Sports and Fitness Industry Association, and the apparatus is essential for everything from CrossFit to OrangeTheory to rowing-only workouts like RowHouse and CITYROW. You can make rowing a living room training option, too—since many rowers are able to be folded up, these tall, lightweight pieces of equipment can be excellent picks for easily movable and stowable home gym gear. There’s a rower to fit every type of budget if you’re looking to add to your garage or basement training space.

Regardless of where you find a machine, a quick rowing segment can make a great addition to your workout routine. The low-impact aspect of the activity can make it more tolerable compared to its high-impact cardio counterparts, like running. Minimizing shock to the joints can help people with nagging issues workout pain-free longer. Research has shown that rowing can help those with arthritis gain muscular strength and endurance while minimizing pain. Shaking up your workout plan by including something like rowing can give your body a break from your norm, helping to prevent overuse injuries.

“It’s a total-body workout that uses most of the muscles in your body during every stroke with little to no impact,” says Lisa Niren, a group fitness instructor and CITYROW trainer. “It burns fat while providing extreme cardiovascular fitness and ridiculous muscular endurance.”

Compared to other full-body cardio sports—swimming and cross-country skiing, for example—you’ll build more strength and power while rowing, says Eric Von Frohlich, CrossFit Level 1 certified trainer and founder of EVF Performance and Row House NYC. “Rowers tend to be more muscular than other endurance athletes: their backs, shoulders and arms are thicker and stronger. A good, powerful row stroke is similar to a kettlebell swing or a deadlift because you have to engage your core so the power from your legs transfers to the handle.”

Rowing is also by nature a strength movement, essentially a blend of a deadlift and a barbell row. That's an ideal combination that everyone should do, hitting all the posterior-chain muscles that can easily get weakened by the types of sedentary lifestyles common today.

Rowing is also easy to program into any workout, because you can get plenty of oomph from a rowing workout in just 10 to 15 minutes, and you can easily work in other implements, mixing rowing with, say, kettlebell swings or some other movements to create well-rounded, full-body routines. Need a few examples? Check out the workouts below.

You can't expect to have an effective rowing machine workout if you don't understand the proper form. From strapping your feet in to nailing the pull, here's how you can row the right way.

Sit with your torso leaned forward at a one-o’clock angle, knees bent, shins as vertical as possible. Your arms should be straight, your shoulders level, and the seat should be close to your heels. Make sure to secure your feet in the machine's stirrups.

Press through your heels and use your legs to forcefully start a stroke. Once your legs are fully extended and your torso is perpendicular to the ground, explosively pull the handle toward your sternum. Focus on keeping the handle’s chain straight. Then hinge at your hips to lean your torso back to the ten- o’clock position. The handle should be just below your ribs.

Straighten your arms, then shift your torso forward. Finish by bending your knees, allowing the seat to slide back toward the starting position. Prepare to repeat the process for another pull.

This quick five-minute routine mixes sprints and focused core work, using the rowing machine for more than just the standard pulls. You'll flip around and put your feet on the seat to challenge your abs with a tough plank knee tuck movement. Your effort will dictate how much work you accomplish, since this is an AMRAP workout—so make sure to keep the effort up.

This is a great workout finisher to burnout the back and core, by combining rowing with some renegade rows. The rowing goal based on calories burned, so the faster you go, the faster you’ll hit your target (and the longer you get to rest). Every minute, you will complete three renegade rows, and then hop on the rower for eight calories to start, and then start again at the top of the next minute, adding a calorie each round for five rounds. This will incentivize you to speed up to finish quickly, getting break as possible before the next minute begins, but that rest will decrease as the calorie goal grows. You can tailor the difficulty of this workout by moving the original calorie goal either up or down.

Set your rower for 1,000 meters, and set the timer. Begin rowing, using powerful strokes. That's just the start; you have work to do off the rower when you're done in the form of hollow rocks. This will encourage you to finish the workout that much faster; the sooner you wrap up, the fewer hollow rocks you have to do. Meanwhile, doing the hollow rocks will allow you to row with more aggression, creating larger and larger breathers between your rowing. Hollow rocks are a solid offset to the rowing work. Rowing teaches you to extend at the hip, while the hollow rocks force you to be in control of hip extension. The blend of moves creates a well-rounded overall workout.

There's nothing quite like a burpee penalty to make you row your fastest. This rowing workout will encourage you to stay with your pace; if you're off on your pace, you'll have to do burpees as a result.

You'll need a partner and a single rower for this workout from veteran trainer Bobby Maximus. The beauty of the workout: The rest period. Both you and your partner, if you're evening matched, rest for about as long as you row, giving your body a chance to recover. That means you can push yourself at each distance, rowing as hard as you can and working to be explosive.

The rules for this one are simple. You and a partner are working a descending ladder of row work, providing each other with a rest period.

This workout starts out slowly but ends with a flourish. The best part: It has a natural built-in warmup.

How to Do It: Warm up for five minutes. Then do the following exercises in the order shown.

That’s 1 round. Do 3 total rounds, resting when needed.

How to Do It: Warm up for 5 minutes. Then do the following exercises in the order shown.

That’s 1 round. Repeat for the following rounds, resting as needed, but adjust the number of reps according to the directions below.

Round 2: Row 200 meters, then do 10 reps of each move

Round 3: Row 300 meters, then do 15 reps of each move

Round 4: Row 200 meters, then do 10 reps of each move

Round 5: Row 100 meters, then do 5 reps of each move

Finish with a 60-second plank.

This total body blast will torch your legs as you work through the squat motion of the thruster and the deadlift-like motion that the row calls for. Get ready to break a killer sweat. You can do this workout with either dumbbells or kettlebells in addition to your rower.

Warm up for five minutes. Then do the following exercises in the order shown.

You'll jump on and off the rower to get your pulse pounding.

Warm up for five minutes. Set the rower’s monitor to display calories. Row hard for 2 minutes. Remember your calorie score—that’s the number of calories you’ll aim hit in each subsequent row. Now do 10 burpees. Row until you reach your calorie score from the previous 2-minute row. Now, do 9 burpees. Row again, hitting the same calorie goal, then do 8 burpees. Continue this descending ladder pattern until you finish the round that has just 1 burpee. Try to complete the workout as fast possible, resting as needed throughout. Aim to finish in less than 30 minutes.

This 10-minute every minute on the minute (EMOM) burner will humble you. “The first few minutes will feel okay, but then fatigue will kick in around minute eight. Try to hang on for as long as possible,” says Ian Creighton, CF-L1. “If you get really fatigued and know you're not going to be able to hit the reps on one of the minutes, rest an entire minute then pick up where you left off.”

If you’re a beginner, tone down your rep goal to adjust the workout to you. Creighton suggests aiming for 10 calories on the rower and 8 burpees if you’re just starting out. You can also cut the lateral jump over the machine—be especially careful with this aspect of the routine. If you’re more advanced, add in a few calories and reps. The key is to not adjust your rep goal after you’ve started. If you feel like you need to take a break, “rest an entire minute then pick up where you left off,” he says.

Start the exercise every minute, on the minute. Aim to finish at about 40 seconds to allow yourself a break before starting the next minute. Alternate the two minutes below until you reach 10 minutes.

Minute 1: 15 calories on the rower

Minute 2: 12 Over the erg burpees—perform a burpee, then at the top jump laterally over the erg and perform a burpee on the other side. That’s one rep.

If you’re looking to mix cardio and core, look no further. In this workout from Creighton, you’ll ladder up reps of a core exercise with calories on the rower to create the perfect full body cardio and core workout.

Start at 20 calories on the rower and 20 reps of the knee tucks and increase by 10 each round until you hit 50. Once you complete 50 of each, ladder back down decreasing by 10 until you reach 20 again.

Erg knee tucks: Get into a high plank position behind the rower—place your hands about 1 to 2 feet behind the rower and feet on the seat of the erg. Adjust hands if necessary so that the seat of the rower is as close to the flywheel as possible in order to get full range of motion. Perform a rep by keeping your core braced and pulling your feet forward and tucking knees into chest, then return to full high plank position.

Mark Barroso, CSCS, is a Master Trainer, Spartan SGX Coach, freelance writer and aspiring Athletic Trainer based in New Jersey.

Ebenezer Samuel, C.S.C.S., is the fitness director of Men's Health and a certified trainer with more than 10 years of training experience. He's logged training time with NFL athletes and track athletes and his current training regimen includes weight training, HIIT conditioning, and yoga. Before joining Men's Health in 2017, he served as a sports columnist and tech columnist for the New York Daily News.  

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These 12 Rowing Machine Workouts Will Build Cardio and Smash Fat

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