Calf workouts are necessary for bigger legs. You might not want straight-up tree trunks, but if you're craving more solid muscle mass—especially in the notoriously tough-to-build calves—you need targeted calf exercises, aside from just hammering your lower body during colossal leg-day workouts.
Calves can be especially challenging. We've heard plenty of lifters complain that they just don't have the right genetics to build big calf muscles. But these stubborn muscles can grow—if you approach your workouts the right way.
What Are the Calf Muscles?
The calf is made up of two main muscles:
Gastrocnemius: Lower leg muscle that sits just under the skin, and it makes up the bulk of the calf.
Soleus: Wide, flat muscle that starts below your knee and runs down your lower leg, connecting to the Achilles tendon above the heel.
These muscles connect the knee and ankle joint to help with knee flexion and extension. Therefore, your calves are essential to everyday activities like walking, running, and jumping.
The Best Exercises for Calf Workouts
Here, we've compiled the best calf exercises you can do to add some definition to your legs. Just be sure to move methodically with proper range of motion to really stimulate the muscles. Also consider working in some explosive cardio, like sprinting and jump rope, to your calf workout, both of which help develop stronger, more muscular calves. Such exercises create micro-tears in the muscle fiber that'll cause the body to send blood and nutrients to the cells in need, growing your calves bigger and stronger.
Benefits of Calf Workouts
There are numerous benefits to working out your calves, ranging from pure aesthetics to injury prevention. Keep the following advantages in mind when you begin to incorporate new calf exercises into your routine.
1. Injury Prevention
Your calf muscles are essential for many activities, whether you run, hike, lift, or play a recreational sport. A strain or pull could sideline your for days, weeks, or even months.
A 2020 study in the Scandanavian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports reviewed 184 calf muscle injuries sustained by Australian soccer players and found that it took weeks for the players to return to running full speed. Older athletes in the study were more likely to re-injure their calves and take even more time off to recover.
But no matter your age, injury prevention should always be a consideration. By strengthening your calves, you're less likely to miss time for rehab.
2. Increased Athletic Performance
It's no secret that strong calves boost athletic performance. Many studies, including one recently published in Physical Therapy in Sport, demonstrate that strong calf muscles boost sprint speed.
But not only that, strong calf muscles also translate to more explosiveness. In a 2020 study from SportMont, elite junior basketball players added seated calf raises to their strength routine and saw massive improvement in their jump performance. Sure, you might just be playing pickup basketball, but you'd still see the gains. And if you're trying to improve your explosiveness for other leg lifts, strong calves will only help.
3. Nice Looking Legs
Nobody wants chicken legs, right? If you only work on your upper body, you'll look disproportionately big up top. And while you likely keep up with your squats and deadlifts to build chiseled glutes and thighs, that's not the most visible part of your legs during shorts season—your calves are.
So don't skip targeted calf exercises unless you want to skip wearing shorts in the summer.