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Military Calisthenics Workout: 6-Day Bodyweight Plan

Last updated: June 2026 — written by the Gymnase Tips training team.

The military calisthenics workout is a 6-day bodyweight training program built around push-ups, pull-ups, sit-ups, planks, and conditioning runs — the same movement patterns the U.S. Army, Marines, Navy, and Air Force use in basic training and ongoing fitness assessments. It builds the strength-endurance, core stability, and aerobic base that military fitness tests demand. No gym, no weights, no equipment beyond a pull-up bar.

This guide covers the military fitness standards, the calisthenics movements that matter most, the full 6-day weekly schedule, ruck and sprint conditioning, and how to scale the plan whether you’re prepping for enlistment, a PT test, or just want elite-level baseline fitness.

Why the military uses calisthenics

Calisthenics scales infinitely, requires zero equipment, and tests fitness in a way that translates directly to combat readiness. A soldier carrying 80 lb of gear over rough terrain doesn’t need a 500 lb deadlift — they need relative strength, muscular endurance, and an aerobic base that doesn’t quit. Bodyweight training delivers all three.

The U.S. Army’s Field Manual 7-22 (Holistic Health and Fitness) codifies bodyweight movements as the foundation of soldier conditioning, with weighted carries and sprints layered on top.

The 8 core military calisthenics movements

  • Push-ups — the universal upper-body test. See our push-up variations guide.
  • Hand-release push-ups — ACFT standard, harder than regular.
  • Pull-ups — Marine PFT and Navy SEAL standard.
  • Sit-ups / planks — core endurance for ruck-marching.
  • Burpees — full-body conditioning under fatigue.
  • Bodyweight squats — leg endurance baseline.
  • Lunges — single-leg strength for uneven terrain.
  • Run / sprint intervals — aerobic + anaerobic capacity.

1 thought on “Military Calisthenics Workout: 6-Day Bodyweight Plan”

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