Exercise training is an effetive form of treatment of non-specific chronic low back pain in adults, yet the efficacy of specific types of exercise training for improving pain, physical function, muscle strength and endurance, mental health, and analgesic pharmacotherapy use when compared to non-exercise training treatments remains unclear. This presentation will report on the findings of a current sytematic review and network metaanalysis of the efficacy of different types of exercise training (resistance, stabilisation/motor control, Pilates, yoga, McKenzie, flexion based exercises, aerobic, water-based, stretching, multimodal and general) on pain, physical function, muscle strength or endurance, analgesic pharmacotherapy use or mental health in adults with non-specific chronic low back pain. Pairwise random effects meta-analyses will be used to compare each outcome following intervention between exercise and non-exercise interventions. A fixed effects network meta-analysis will be conducted to compare different exercise and non-exercise interventions for pain outcomes. Intervention effects were estimated using standardised mean differences (SMD). The findings of this project will inform exercise prescription for treating chronic low back pain. The findings will also inform clinicians and the community as to what kinds of exercise are most effective for treating chronic low back pain. This project was funded by MOVE muscle, bone & joint health and was registered with PROSPERO (CRD42017068668).