Complete Full-Body Workout No Equipment: 4-Week Apartment Program

A complete bodyweight workout program for apartments requiring no equipment and only 4×4 feet of space. Includes progressive difficulty, exercise library, and 4-week plan for all fitness levels.

SnugGym Research Published

Complete Full-Body Workout No Equipment: 4-Week Apartment Program

You do not need equipment to build strength, improve cardiovascular fitness, and develop mobility. Our analysis presents a complete bodyweight training program designed for apartments, requiring only 4×4 feet of clear floor space — less than most walk-in closets.

Program Structure: Full-body workouts, 3–4 days per week, progressive difficulty across four weeks. No equipment. Minimal noise. Suitable for all fitness levels with modifications provided.


Program Overview

What You Need

Requirement Specification
Floor space 4×4 feet minimum (16 sq ft)
Ceiling height Standard 8 feet sufficient
Equipment None (bodyweight only)
Time per session 30–45 minutes
Frequency 3–4 days per week
Noise level Low (no jumping unless modified in)

The Movement Patterns

This program covers six fundamental movement patterns using only bodyweight:

Pattern Primary Exercise Target Muscles
Squat Bodyweight squat Quadriceps, glutes
Hinge Glute bridge Hamstrings, glutes, lower back
Push Push-up Chest, shoulders, triceps
Pull Doorframe row or Superman Back, biceps, rear deltoids
Lunge Reverse lunge Quadriceps, glutes, balance
Core Plank variations Rectus abdominis, obliques, transverse abdominis

Exercise Library: Form and Progressions

1. Bodyweight Squat

Starting position: Feet shoulder-width apart, toes pointed slightly outward. Chest up, core engaged.

Movement: Hips back and down until thighs are parallel to floor (or as low as mobility allows). Knees track over toes. Drive through heels to stand.

Progressions:

  • Beginner: Squat to a chair (touch and stand)
  • Intermediate: Standard squat, 2-second pause at bottom
  • Advanced: Single-leg squat (pistol squat progression with chair assist)

Common errors: Knees caving inward, heels lifting, torso falling forward

2. Glute Bridge

Starting position: Supine, knees bent 90°, feet flat on floor, arms at sides.

Movement: Drive hips upward, squeezing glutes at top. Body forms straight line from shoulders to knees. Lower under control.

Progressions:

  • Beginner: Standard glute bridge, 10 reps
  • Intermediate: Single-leg glute bridge
  • Advanced: Feet-elevated glute bridge (on a book or step)

3. Push-Up

Starting position: Plank position, hands under shoulders, body straight from head to heels.

Movement: Lower chest to floor, elbows at 45° from body. Push back to start.

Progressions:

  • Beginner: Wall push-up → Incline push-up (hands on couch/bed) → Knee push-up
  • Intermediate: Standard push-up
  • Advanced: Diamond push-up → Decline push-up (feet elevated) → Archer push-up

Common errors: Sagging hips, flared elbows (90°), partial range of motion

4. Doorframe Row (or Superman if no suitable doorframe)

Doorframe row: Grasp doorframe at chest height. Lean back until arms are straight. Pull chest toward frame, squeezing shoulder blades together.

Superman (alternative): Lie prone, arms extended forward. Lift arms, chest, and legs simultaneously, squeezing back muscles. Hold 2 seconds.

Progressions:

  • Beginner: Superman holds, 10 seconds
  • Intermediate: Doorframe row, controlled tempo
  • Advanced: Doorframe row with feet elevated, slow eccentric (3-second lowering)

5. Reverse Lunge

Starting position: Standing, feet together, core engaged.

Movement: Step backward with one foot, lowering back knee toward floor. Front thigh approaches parallel. Drive through front heel to return.

Progressions:

  • Beginner: Static lunge (feet fixed, move up and down)
  • Intermediate: Standard reverse lunge, alternating
  • Advanced: Bulgarian split lunge (rear foot elevated on bed/chair)

6. Plank

Starting position: Forearms on floor, elbows under shoulders, body straight from head to heels.

Movement: Hold position, core tight, hips level. Breathe normally.

Progressions:

  • Beginner: Knee plank (hold 20–30 seconds)
  • Intermediate: Standard plank (hold 45–60 seconds)
  • Advanced: Side plank, plank with shoulder tap, plank to push-up

The 4-Week Program

Week 1: Foundation (Learning Movement)

Day Exercise Sets × Reps Rest
1 Bodyweight squat (chair if needed) 3 × 10 60 sec
Glute bridge 3 × 12 45 sec
Push-up (incline or knee) 3 × 8 60 sec
Superman 3 × 10 45 sec
Reverse lunge (static) 2 × 8 each leg 45 sec
Knee plank 3 × 20 sec 45 sec
2 Rest or light walking
3 Repeat Day 1
4 Rest
5 Repeat Day 1
6–7 Rest

Week 2: Building Volume

Day Exercise Sets × Reps Rest
1 Bodyweight squat 3 × 15 60 sec
Glute bridge 3 × 15 45 sec
Push-up (progress to standard if ready) 3 × 10 60 sec
Doorframe row or Superman 3 × 12 45 sec
Reverse lunge (alternating) 3 × 10 each leg 45 sec
Standard plank 3 × 30 sec 45 sec
2 Rest or light walking
3 Repeat Day 1
4 Rest
5 Repeat Day 1
6–7 Rest

Week 3: Adding Intensity

Day Exercise Sets × Reps Rest
1 Bodyweight squat (2-sec pause at bottom) 3 × 12 60 sec
Single-leg glute bridge 3 × 10 each 45 sec
Standard push-up 3 × 12 60 sec
Doorframe row (slow lowering) 3 × 12 45 sec
Reverse lunge 3 × 12 each leg 45 sec
Plank + shoulder tap 3 × 10 taps each 45 sec
2 Rest or light walking
3 Repeat Day 1
4 Rest
5 Repeat Day 1
6–7 Rest

Week 4: Peak Challenge

Day Exercise Sets × Reps Rest
1 Bodyweight squat 4 × 15 60 sec
Single-leg glute bridge (elevated foot) 3 × 12 each 45 sec
Push-up (diamond or decline if able) 3 × 12 60 sec
Doorframe row (feet elevated) 3 × 12 45 sec
Bulgarian split lunge (rear foot on chair) 3 × 10 each 60 sec
Side plank 3 × 30 sec each 45 sec
2 Rest or light walking
3 Repeat Day 1
4 Rest
5 Repeat Day 1
6–7 Rest

How to Progress Beyond 4 Weeks

The Four Progression Pathways

Once the Week 4 exercises become manageable, increase difficulty through one of these methods:

Pathway Method Example
Volume Increase sets or reps 3 × 15 → 4 × 15 → 3 × 20
Tempo Slow the eccentric (lowering) 3-second lowering on all movements
Unilateral Shift to single-limb variations Standard squat → Bulgarian split squat → Pistol squat progression
External load Add weight (backpack, water jugs) Wear a loaded backpack during squats and lunges

The Backpack Loading Method

When bodyweight alone is insufficient, a standard backpack loaded with books, water bottles, or bags of rice provides adjustable resistance:

Exercise Loading Method
Squat Wear loaded backpack
Glute bridge Place weight on hips
Push-up Wear loaded backpack
Lunge Wear loaded backpack
Row Fill backpack, pull toward chest in bent-over position

A 20 lb backpack transforms bodyweight squats into a meaningful strength stimulus for most general fitness trainees.


Cardio Component (No Equipment, Low Noise)

Steady-State Options (No Jumping)

Exercise Duration Notes
Marching in place (high knees, low impact) 10–20 minutes Lift knees without leaving ground
Shadow boxing 10–15 minutes Zero noise, high heart rate
Step-ups (use a sturdy chair) 10–15 minutes Alternate legs, controlled pace
Fast bodyweight squats 5 minutes (as many as possible) Continuous movement

Interval Option (Minimal Noise)

Interval Duration Exercise
Work 30 seconds Mountain climbers (slow, controlled)
Rest 30 seconds Walk in place
Work 30 seconds Fast bodyweight squats
Rest 30 seconds Walk in place
Work 30 seconds Push-up to down dog (flow)
Rest 30 seconds Walk in place
Repeat 4–6 rounds

Sample Weekly Schedule

Day Workout Duration
Monday Strength (program above) 35–45 minutes
Tuesday Cardio (steady-state) 20–30 minutes
Wednesday Strength (program above) 35–45 minutes
Thursday Rest or stretching 15–20 minutes
Friday Strength (program above) 35–45 minutes
Saturday Cardio intervals or recreational activity 20–30 minutes
Sunday Rest

Noise-Specific Modifications for Apartments

Standard Exercise Quiet Alternative Noise Reduction
Jumping jacks Step jacks (no jump) Eliminates footstrike
Jump squats Squat to calf raise Eliminates landing impact
Burpees Walk-out to push-up to stand Eliminates jump and drop
Running in place High-knee march Eliminates footstrike
Broad jumps Walking lunge Eliminates impact

Who This Program Is For

This program is ideal for:

  • Beginners building a fitness foundation
  • Travelers in hotel rooms without gym access
  • Apartment dwellers who need silent workout options
  • Individuals testing whether home training is sustainable before buying equipment
  • Active recovery days for regular lifters

This program is NOT sufficient for:

  • Advanced strength athletes requiring heavy loading
  • Trainees pursuing maximal muscle hypertrophy (equipment eventually needed)
  • Powerlifters or Olympic weightlifters
  • Individuals unable to perform floor-based movements due to injury or mobility limitation

When to Add Equipment

Our research indicates that most trainees reach the limits of pure bodyweight training within 8–16 weeks of consistent effort. The logical first additions are:

  1. Resistance bands — Add pulling resistance, assist progressions
  2. Adjustable dumbbells — Enable heavy lower-body and upper-body loading
  3. Pull-up bar — Vertical pulling cannot be replicated without equipment

See our resistance bands vs dumbbells comparison for guidance on first equipment purchases.



This program is for informational purposes. Consult a physician before beginning any exercise program, especially if you have existing health conditions or have been sedentary. Stop any exercise that causes pain.