
What Are the Best Exercises for Speed?

The best exercises for speed are movements that train explosive force — the ability to push the ground hard and fast. Speed is power applied quickly. Strong legs that move slowly produce no speed; weaker legs that move fast often produce more.
The mechanism: speed requires fast-twitch muscle fibres to fire in coordinated, high-force contractions. These fibres are recruited through plyometrics (jumping, bounding, sprinting) and heavy single-leg work — not through long-distance running, per the NSCA’s Essentials of Strength Training and Conditioning. In fact, too much steady-state cardio teaches the body to be slow, the opposite of what speed athletes want. The right routine looks more like “short, hard, full recovery” than “long, slow, repeated.” For a focused programme on the muscular base that supports speed, see our strength training for stamina guide.
Benefits of the Best Exercises for Speed
Benefit 1: Faster Sprint and Acceleration Times
A meta-analysis published in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research (JSCR) on plyometric training shows 6–8 weeks produce measurable improvement in 10m and 30m sprint times — even for athletes already in shape. Beginners often see 5–10% improvements in this window.
Benefit 2: More Explosive Power for Sport
Speed exercises directly transfer to football, cricket, basketball, tennis, and most field sports. The first three steps in any direction — the moves that decide most plays — depend on explosive force production.
Benefit 3: Healthier, More Resilient Knees and Ankles
Plyometric training strengthens tendons, ligaments, and connective tissue. People who train speed correctly have lower joint-injury rates than steady runners. Pair with our strength training for runners programme for a complete plan.
Benefit 4: Higher Calorie Burn in Less Time
Speed training is metabolically intense. A 25-minute speed session can burn the same calories as a 50-minute jog — and continue burning for hours afterward. Combine with our strength training for legs programme to build the muscular base that supports power output.
7 Best Exercises for Speed (At Home)
Exercise 1: Bodyweight Squat Jump — Vertical Power — 4 Sets × 6 Reps
Drop into a quarter-squat, explode up, land soft. The foundational power-development move. Modification: smaller jump, focus on landing softly.
Exercise 2: Broad Jump — Horizontal Power — 4 Sets × 5 Reps
From a standing start, swing arms back, jump forward as far as possible, land soft. Best translates to sprint acceleration. Modification: shorter jump, focus on landing on both feet evenly.
Exercise 3: Hill Sprint — Direct Speed Work — 6–8 Sprints of 10–15 Seconds, Full Recovery
Find a moderate incline. Sprint up, walk down, repeat. Hill sprints build power without the impact of flat-ground sprinting. Modification: faster walk on a slight incline.
Exercise 4: Single-Leg Bound — Unilateral Power — 3 Sets × 8 Each Leg
Hop forward off one leg as far as possible, land on the same leg, repeat. Trains the single-leg force production used in actual sprinting. Modification: small hops in place first.
Exercise 5: Lateral Skater — Side-to-Side Speed — 3 Sets × 12 Each Side
Hop sideways from one foot to the other, landing soft. Builds the lateral push-off used in cutting and direction change. Modification: smaller distance, no hop, just step.
Exercise 6: Plyo Lunge — Single-Leg Power — 3 Sets × 8 Each Leg
Drop into a lunge, jump up and switch legs in the air, land in the opposite lunge. The single most effective at-home power move once you’ve built a base. Modification: alternating walking lunges.
Exercise 7: Tempo Run — Aerobic Base + Speed — 4 × 200m at 75% Effort
Most speed athletes need an aerobic base. Tempo runs build it without compromising speed. Modification: 4 × 100m at 70% for beginners.
Speed Workout Routine (3 Days a Week)
Day 1 — Power: Squat jump, broad jump, plyo lunge (4 × 6 each, full recovery)
Day 2 — Sprint: Hill sprint × 6, lateral skater × 12 (full recovery between sets)
Day 3 — Tempo: Tempo run × 4, single-leg bound × 8 each leg
Full recovery means 60–90 seconds between explosive sets. Speed work fails without recovery.
Common Mistakes with Speed Training
Mistake 1: No Recovery between Reps — Correction: Full Rest, 60–90 Seconds
Speed training only works if every rep is at maximum quality. Cutting rest turns it into conditioning — a different stimulus. Full rest between explosive sets is non-negotiable.
Mistake 2: Doing Speed Work When Tired — Correction: Always Train Speed Fresh
Tired speed work is slow speed work. Slow speed work makes you slower. Schedule speed training first in the day, before any other workout.
Mistake 3: Skipping the Strength Base — Correction: Squat and Lunge Twice a Week
Speed = power = force × velocity. Without basic leg strength, plyometrics have no force to multiply. Bodyweight squats and lunges twice a week underpin every speed gain.
How Habuild Supports Your Speed Training
Yoga as the Daily Mobility and Recovery Foundation for Speed Athletes
Speed training itself — plyometrics, sprints, hill work — happens 2–3 times a week using the routine above. Habuild’s daily live yoga is the foundation that makes that training pay off: hip openers that lengthen sprinting stride, hamstring mobility that protects against pulls, ankle dorsiflexion work that improves push-off power, and active recovery between hard sessions.
Why Pro Athletes Use Yoga Alongside Speed Training
Recovery yoga is standard practice in NBA, EPL, and Olympic-level training rooms — and across multiple Indian national-level training programmes. Not as the speed driver, but as the daily layer that lets athletes train hard sessions back-to-back without breaking down. The same logic applies to recreational sprinters, weekend players, cricketers, and parents trying to keep up with kids.
Live Daily Sessions with Real-Time Form Correction
The instructor catches the three killers in mobility work — locked breathing, shrugged shoulders, lost neutral spine during deep hip openers — in real time. Pre-recorded video can’t.
Accountability and Streaks
A fixed morning slot, a streak counter, and a community group. Speed gains require months of consistent training plus consistent recovery — daily yoga is the recovery layer that lets the speed work happen.
Quick Summary
- Speed = explosive force, trained through plyometrics and short sprints — not long jogging.
- Best exercises for speed at home: squat jump, broad jump, hill sprint, plyo lunge, lateral skater.
- 3-day weekly plan works for beginners and competitive athletes alike.
- Three killer mistakes: no recovery, tired sessions, no strength base.
- Habuild’s daily live yoga is the mobility and recovery foundation that supports your speed training — the same model used in elite sport.
Frequently Asked Questions — Best Exercises for Speed
What Are the Best Exercises for Speed at Home?
Squat jump, broad jump, hill sprint (or stair sprint), single-leg bound, lateral skater, plyo lunge, and tempo run. No equipment required.
How Long Does it Take to Get Noticeably Faster?
Most people see measurable improvement in 4–6 weeks of consistent training. Major gains continue through 12 weeks.
Can Yoga Alone Make Me Faster?
No. Speed gains require dedicated plyometric and sprint training 2–3 times a week. Yoga is the daily mobility and recovery foundation that lets you train speed harder, more consistently, and with fewer injuries — the model used by NBA, EPL, and Indian national-level athletes.
How Often Should I Do Workouts to Improve Speed?
Two to three speed sessions per week with full rest days between. Daily mobility and recovery work (yoga) is fine and recommended on the rest days.