The gym is way out there, and youโre not leaving your living room any time soon. Maybe youโre watching the kids, or maybe your carโs in the shop. Whatever the case may be, sometimes bodyweight-only workouts will cut it. And other times, you just need the sweet release of lifting something heavy.

If you donโt have weight plates at home, thereโs no need to despair. You probably have all the fitness equipment you need already โ itโs just disguised as household equipment. So when you need to lift heavy so badly that youโre about to carry your fully-grown German shepherd around in your arms just for a workout, start looking around the house differently. Youโll find these household items are also pretty good at being fitness equipment.
Household Items That Double as Fitness Equipment
Pot
If youโve ever loaded a pot full to the brim with chili into the car for a family holiday gathering, then you know โ pots arenโt just for cooking. They can get heavy pretty quickly. Thatโs not the best thing when you go to take something off the stove without oven mitts. But itโs great news for your at-home strength training.
Digging out your biggest pot from amongst all your pots and pans has a whole host of benefits for your โequipmentโ-free training. For one thing, you can customize the amount of weight youโre using. Adding a little bit of water to the pot makes it only moderately heavy, whereas adding a whole lot more makes it a lot more difficult. (Plus, youโll be laying the groundwork for a great pasta boil.)
Holding a pot sloshing full of water also poses a lot of stability challenges. In order to avoid spilling, youโll need to keep your wrists steady throughout the lifts, holding the pot like a literal goblet along its handles.
Youโll also need to keep your โbar pathโ steady, especially when using both hands to press the pot overhead or balancing yourself to perform lunges with the pot loaded in front of you.
Exercises With a Pot
- Pot Goblet Squat
 - Pot Lunge
 - Pot Press
 
Start with an empty pot โ just like you would an empty barbell โ just to get a feel for what the weird implement feels like. Then, fill up with water as needed. Keep a towel on standby just in case.
Broomstick
Your broomstick isnโt just for cleaning the floor anymore โ you can also clean it like a barbell. If youโre going to be away from your barbells for a while, you can maintain your commitment to high-quality form with something as simple as a broomstick.
Of course, it wonโt be the same โ a little plastic broomstick is a far cry from a 45-pound steel masterpiece โ but youโll be able to simulate a lot of movements quite nicely. This will give you a very gym-like flare to your at-home workouts.
Using a broomstick wonโt let you load any significant amount of weight, but it will let you mimic the positioning and ranges of motion youโll use with a barbell. The idea here isnโt so much to give yourself a heavier workout. Instead, think of the broomstick as an implement for skills-based training so that you can work on that good old-fashioned muscle memory even without weights.
Exercises With a Broomstick
- Broomstick Clean & Jerk
 - Broomstick Overhead Squat
 - Broomstick Snatch
 - Broomstick Back Squat
 
If youโre going to practice your low bar back squat form, make sure you test out the broomstickโs strength first. Pinning the bar to your back as intensely as you need to for a low bar back squat may be enough to snap a weaker broomstick, and you definitely want to avoid that.
Proceed cautiously if youโre going to apply significant pressure to the broomstick, and remember that youโre using it to train for skills rather than strength.
Backpack
Theyโre not just for middle-schoolers anymore. Backpacks are great for simulating weighted vests. You can wear them on your back โ as the name implies โ or you can flip them around to front-load them. This reverse-turtle look can help you front-load weight, as you might often do in the gym.
Whichever way youโre wearing the backpack, make sure the straps are tight so that the pack is snug around you. A little bit of jostling back and forth might be good for your stabilizer muscles, true โ but you also want to avoid chafing, especially if youโre opting for a high-intensity move like backpack burpees.
[Read More: The Best Bodyweight Exercises, + Workouts and Tips From a CPT]
As with using a pot from the kitchen, you can customize the weight youโre using with a backpack very easily. If youโre loading it with books for maximum weight, you might want to slip a sweater in the back of the pack so that your body has a cushion from any sharp edges from those old hardcovers.
Exercises With a Backpack
During the lunges โ or even the run โ you can opt to wear the backpack on your chest instead of your back. If you do that, make sure youโre not letting it either hunch you forward or overcompensate by hyperextending backward.
Suitcase
Even in the gym itself, youโll often perform exercises with โsuitcaseโ in the name. So why not just use the real thing? Dig around in your closet to find a suitcase with a sturdy handle โ you donโt want any old fraying to get in the way of a good workout.
Suitcase exercises in the gym โ like the suitcase carry and the suitcase deadlift โ get their names because people will often carry a suitcase with one hand on the side of their body. These suitcase exercises are unilateral in nature, but that doesnโt mean you have to work with a suitcase only one side at a time.
If desired, set your stance a little wider and scoot both hands to grasp the center handle of your suitcase together โ as with a kettlebell โ to perform suitcase sumo deadlifts. If youโre looking for a way to perform a loaded bilateral lift with a big stability challenge, this is the one for you.
Exercises With a Suitcase
- Suitcase Carry
 - Suitcase Deadlift
 - Suitcase Sumo Deadlift
 
If youโre the kind of person that likes to know exactly what youโre lifting, balance the suitcase on a home scale if you have one. That way, you can know exactly how much weight youโre getting in there (and how much to adjust your packing for the next big trip).
Towel
Towels might seem like they belong more in the locker room than in the gym itself. But theyโre pretty versatile in use, and can certainly come to your rescue if youโre trying to create an at-home workout with minimal actual equipment.
You might have seen towels used for extremely challenging towel pull-ups. But if you donโt happen to have a pull-up bar at home, that advanced move might not help you here. Still, you can adapt its principles to other movements.
Loop your towel around a loaded backpack handle, for example. Grab both ends of the towel and use them to perform biceps curls with the backpack as a source of heavy but unstable weight. The load will stimulate your biceps a lot to begin with โ the added instability will add even more quality to the move.
Exercises With A Towel
- Isometric Biceps Curl
 - Loaded Backpack Biceps Curl
 - Towel Hamstring Curl
 
Even if you donโt have a backpack to load, you can use towels to help with isometric work, too. Simply stand on the center of the towel and pull both ends up toward you in a biceps curl position. Contract to full tension for as long as you can. Reset and repeat for maximum time under tension. Then, maybe put in a load of laundry.
Bedsheet
Bedsheets arenโt just for sleeping. When you need to get creative about your workouts at home, dig into the closet to find an old โ but sturdy โ set of sheets to help you chase those gains.
Set up your bedsheet with a strategically-placed knot, which youโll toss over a door and close it securely. This will create a DIY suspension trainer โ just do plenty of tugging to make sure itโs sturdy before you proceed. Just as you would with a TRX trainer, use the bedsheet to help you manipulate your own bodyweight into an intense set of upper body-building moves.
Exercises With a Bedsheet
- Bedsheet Inverted Row
 - Bedsheet Bodyweight Skull Crusher
 - Bedsheet Bodyweight Biceps Curl
 
If you live with anyone, make sure they know what youโre doing before you start doing it. When youโre performing bodyweight workouts with a makeshift suspension system secured by a closed door, itโs not the time for a curious roommate to come check what you want for dinner.
Couch
Unless youโre someone like Matthias McKinnon, you wonโt be lifting this one. Instead, use the couch as a sturdy base to support your bodyweight exercises. With your couch (almost) literally in hand, you can manipulate the angle of pretty much any bodyweight move.
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For these exercises, youโll essentially be using your couch as a makeshift weight bench. Itโll support you during โbenchโ dips, and you can put your back foot (no sneakers) up on it during your Bulgarian split squats. With the push-up variations, use the couch to elevate your feet in the pike push-up and your hands in the incline push-up.
Exercises with a Couch
- Couch Dip
 - Bulgarian Split Squat
 - Pike Push-Up
 - Incline Push-Up
 
If your couch isnโt set up against a wall, be extra sure that itโs stable before you start. You definitely donโt want to accidentally kick it away from you during a pike push-up.
Programming Workouts With Household Items
Even when youโre planning to use unusual implements in your program, youโll generally start with the same basic components of program design โ your goals, your exercises, and your desired training split.
Determine Your Goals
If youโre thinking about using random household items as fitness equipment, youโve first got to ask yourself why. Programming will be different if youโre expecting to train at home without traditional equipment for an extended period of time versus if youโre looking for a one-off weekend session.
Assess Your Equipment
You donโt want to throw the whole kitchen sink at your workout unless your kitchen sink can handle it. Check to make sure your broomstick is sturdy enough to support skills-based work. Look over your couch to ensure that your foot wonโt break through that pesky groove where one too many people have watched football for one too many Monday nights.
[Read More: The Best Biceps Exercises for a Muscle-Building Workout]
Depending on your goals โ and the set-up of your home โ you might want to choose one piece of โequipmentโ and cycle through all the moves you can in one workout. Or, you might decide that your suitcases are too old to be trustworthy for a workout, but your pots and couch will do just fine. The combinations are up to you.
Choose a Training Split
Once youโve decided which, if any, pieces of equipment to whip out for your program, youโll also have to determine a training split. If you want to work out only a few times per week, a full-body split might work best. You may also opt to work out more often, in which case separating your workouts into push-pull-leg days might feel most effective.
Youโll also want to consider the unique training opportunity that a sturdy broomstick offers. You can potentially do a lot of barbell-adjacent skills training that wonโt tax your muscles as much. But they will form and keep good habits. You can perform these skills workouts more often, depending on your needs and goals.
Sample Workout With Household Items
Letโs say youโre looking to do a full-body workout with your household items โ and youโre able to access multiple items for the same session. Try out the following at-home workout โ complete with a cardio finisher โ to get your blood pumping with no actual โfitnessโ equipment in sight.
The Workout
- Pot Goblet Squat: 3 x 10
 - Bedsheet Inverted Row: 3 x 10-15
 - Suitcase Deadlift: 3 x 8 per side
 - Couch Dip: 3 x 15-20
 - Isometric Biceps Curl: 3 x 20 seconds
 - Backpack Burpee: 6 x 10 EMOM (every minute on the minute)
 
If youโre not very experienced with burpees โ or weighted burpees โ start with a smaller number of reps per minute (five, for example). Once youโre skilled at 60 burpees in six minutes, consider gradually increasing your minute count up to 10.
Home-Grown Fitness
Exercise equipment doesnโt always look like what youโd find in a gym. Just like your body is your most valuable tool for exercising, your training tools donโt always have to be sleek and metallic and covered in chalk. Sometimes, you just need your couch, an old bedsheet, that suitcase you only break out once a year, and a bit of creativity.
Featured Image: Tirachard Kumtanom / Shutterstock


