Bodybuilding is one of the most crowded corners of YouTube — and one of the most contradictory. For every channel grounded in peer-reviewed exercise science there are ten selling shortcuts, and the line between genuine coaching and supplement marketing is rarely obvious from a thumbnail. This guide cuts through that. Below are nine channels we consider the most useful in the space, grouped by what they actually do well, with an honest note on the limitations of each.
We've deliberately kept the list short. There are hundreds of decent fitness channels, but most lifters are better served by following three or four creators whose strengths complement each other than by drowning in a feed of conflicting advice. The nine here cover the full spectrum: rigorous science, practical programming, elite physique sport, rehab and injury prevention, diet, entertainment, and the more controversial world of performance-enhancing drug education. If you understand how they differ, you can build a personal shortlist in about five minutes — that's what the rest of this page is for.
How the landscape breaks down
It helps to think of bodybuilding YouTube as five overlapping camps. The science-based educators — Jeff Nippard, Renaissance Periodization, Jeremy Ethier — translate research into training you can actually run, and are the safest starting point for most people. The clinical and rehab-minded coaches like ATHLEAN-X lean on sports-medicine backgrounds to keep you training around pain rather than through it. The competitive pros such as Chris Bumstead show what the top of the sport looks like day to day, which is inspiring but rarely a literal template. The myth-busters and entertainers — Greg Doucette, Buff Dudes, Ryan Humiston — keep you watching while still teaching something. And finally the pharmacology and hormone camp, led by More Plates More Dates, covers the enhanced side of the sport that most channels avoid discussing openly.
Almost nobody fits one box cleanly, and that's the point: a good shortlist pulls from two or three camps at once. A natural beginner might pair a science educator with a rehab coach; an experienced competitor might combine a pro's lifestyle content with deep pharmacology research. The camps below are a map, not a ranking.
🏋️ Lifting Calculator Convert lb to kg, load the bar with the right plates, and estimate your one-rep max. Open tool →Some channels here — most directly More Plates More Dates — discuss anabolic steroids, hormones and other performance-enhancing drugs. Our position is straightforward: we don't recommend using them. Outside of a prescription for a diagnosed medical condition, anabolic steroid use is illegal in most countries and carries serious, well-documented harms — cardiovascular damage and high blood pressure, long-term and sometimes permanent disruption of your body's own hormone production, liver strain from oral compounds, mood instability and dependency, and added dangers for anyone still growing. The value in this kind of content is understanding what's really happening in the sport, and seeing why so many physiques online are simply unrealistic for a natural lifter — not treating it as a how-to. If you are ever genuinely considering it, the right place to start is a doctor, not a YouTube channel.
Quick comparison
| Channel | Best for | Level | Best suited to | Style |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jeff Nippard | Evidence-based training & programming | Beginner–Intermediate | Natural lifters | Calm, research-led |
| Renaissance Periodization | Hypertrophy theory & volume | Intermediate–Advanced | All lifters | Academic, witty |
| Chris Bumstead | Elite physique & contest lifestyle | All levels | Inspiration | Vlog, aspirational |
| ATHLEAN-X | Injury prevention & technique fixes | Beginner–Intermediate | Natural lifters | Clinical, intense |
| Greg Doucette | Diet, satiety & myth-busting | All levels | All lifters | Loud, polarising |
| Jeremy Ethier | Polished beginner science | Beginner | Natural lifters | Clean, structured |
| Ryan Humiston | Exercise selection & technique | Intermediate | All lifters | High-intensity, dense |
| Buff Dudes | Free plans & enjoyable basics | Beginner | Beginners | Comedic, friendly |
| More Plates More Dates | PEDs, hormones & TRT education | Advanced | Advanced | Deep, research-heavy |
The 9 channels
How to choose for your level
There is no single best bodybuilding channel — only the best one for where you are right now. Here is how we'd point people depending on experience and goals.
Total beginner
Start with Jeremy Ethier or Jeff Nippard. Both explain the fundamentals — progressive overload, form, how much to train — clearly and without hype. Add Buff Dudes if you want a free, ready-to-run plan and a lighter tone while the habit forms.
Intermediate, plateaued
You've outgrown the basics and gains have slowed. Renaissance Periodization for volume and programming theory, and Ryan Humiston for rethinking exercise selection, are the two that tend to unstick people at this stage.
Training around pain
If a nagging shoulder, knee or back is dictating your sessions, ATHLEAN-X is the most useful starting point thanks to Jeff Cavaliere's physical-therapy background. Pair it with a science channel so you're not only training defensively.
Understanding the enhanced side
To understand the part PEDs play in the sport, More Plates More Dates covers the subject more rigorously than anyone. Watch it to grasp the risks and to see why so many online physiques are out of reach naturally — not as encouragement. We don't recommend enhancement: the health and legal consequences are real, and a doctor is the only appropriate source if you're ever considering it.