Published: 31/12/2025 | By: David van Wetherill
A new year brings fresh motivation, and for many that means getting back into the gym – or stepping in for the first time. If you’re starting your fitness journey, training your arms is one of the easiest and most motivating places to begin. Seeing your strength build week by week is a real confidence boost. In this piece, Sports Direct ambassador David Van Wetherill shares his go-to arm exercises to help you get started.
When I first started working out, arm day was my comfort zone. It goes without saying that, in comparison to my legs, they have always been my strength. Not only that, but the movements felt straightforward, the progress came quickly, and it taught me fundamentals I still rely on today: control, tempo, joint safety and stability, and how to move with intention instead of just “lifting something heavy”.
It has become critical to my functionality as an adaptive athlete on crutches – not just for performance, but for life. We must work on our weaknesses, but we certainly must maximise our strengths.
This guide walks you through the arm exercises that helped me most as a beginner – what worked, what didn’t, the mistakes I made early on, and what I wish someone had told me sooner.
WHY TRAINING YOUR ARMS MATTERS
A lot of beginners think arm training is just about aesthetics. Sure, stronger arms may look good to some, but there’s much more to it. Training for strength, stability and performance is the primary goal for me.
Lifting bags, picking up washing, groceries – you name it – pushing and pulling… it all requires arm strength.
Stronger biceps, triceps and shoulders help you press better, pull better, stabilise better, and reduce compensations in major lifts.
Weak arms can overload the wrists, elbows and shoulders during larger compound movements. Strengthening the smaller muscles protects the bigger ones.
As a beginner, arm exercises offer some of the fastest strength and muscle gains, which definitely helped my confidence to stay motivated.
Below are five of my most beginner-friendly arm exercises. They work the muscles differently and help build a strong, balanced foundation.
A highly effective compound exercise that primarily targets the triceps, while also engaging the shoulders and chest. You can do them at home using a stable chair or bench.
How to Do Them
Why They Matter
Triceps dips are one of the most effective exercises for activating the triceps brachii – the main muscle responsible for elbow extension – while also recruiting stabiliser muscles in the shoulders and core.
Beginner Tips
Reps, Sets & Rest
60–90 seconds rest
The classic biceps-building exercise. Simple, effective, and perfect for those starting out.
How to Do Them
Why They Work
Curls isolate the bicep and teach you how to control elbow movement, which is crucial for all pulling exercises.
Beginner Tips
Reps, Sets & Rest
60–90 seconds rest
A bodyweight pushing variation that places emphasis on the triceps, while also engaging the chest, shoulders and core.
How to Do Them
Why They’re Important
Diamond push-ups target the triceps more than standard push-ups by narrowing hand positioning, and they also improve core and shoulder stability.
Beginner Tips
Reps, Sets & Rest
60–90 seconds rest
A simple movement that isolates the triceps – the muscle responsible for arm extension and roughly two-thirds of your upper arm size.
Kickbacks improve elbow stability and strengthen the back of the arm, complementing pressing movements.
60 seconds rest
Hammer curls train both the biceps and the brachialis – a deeper muscle that adds thickness to the upper arm.
How to Do Them
Why They’re Important
They mimic natural grip patterns and help strengthen your forearms and grip.
Beginner Tips
Reps, Sets & Rest
A manageable session 2–3 times per week with at least one rest day in between.
Warm-Up (3–4 minutes)
Main Workout
Rest
STRONG ARMS ARE A BEGINNING, NOT THE END
Building arm strength is rewarding, motivating and empowering – not just physically, but mentally. These exercises offer a foundation you can build on for months and years to come. Remember:
Consistency wins every time.