
Arnold Press
arnold-press
When I coach you through this lift, good reps should feel like a seamless, sweeping arc rather than a rigid push. You’ll sense a deep, even tension building through your anterior delts as the weights rotate outward, melting into a solid overhead lockout. Your core stays braced, your breath remains steady, and each repetition leaves your shoulders feeling thoroughly worked yet perfectly controlled, never strained or rushed.
Steps
- 1
Sit upright on a sturdy bench with feet planted flat and shoulder-width apart.
- 2
Hold a dumbbell in each hand at shoulder level with palms facing inward and elbows bent to 90 degrees.
- 3
Engage your core and maintain a neutral spine against the back support.
- 4
Exhale as you drive the weights upward while rotating your palms outward until they face forward.
- 5
Fully extend your arms overhead while keeping a soft bend in the elbows to protect the joints.
- 6
Inhale as you slowly reverse the rotation and lower the dumbbells back toward shoulder height.
- 7
Return the weights to the starting position with elbows bent and palms facing your chest.
- 8
Pause briefly to reset your posture and grip before beginning the next repetition.
If you're new to this
When first learning this movement, prioritize a lighter load and focus entirely on the rotational pathway rather than chasing heavy weight. Keep your spine neutral and press your lower back gently into the seat to prevent overarching. If your shoulders shrug toward your ears, you are engaging the traps prematurely; consciously depress them before driving upward. True muscular failure arrives as deep heat in the front delts and slight trembling in the stabilizers, not sharp joint pain or lumbar strain. Stop immediately if your elbows drift too far back or your breathing becomes erratic. Beginners often rush the wrist rotation or flare their elbows excessively wide, which shifts tension away from the target tissue. Move slowly through early repetitions until the arc feels natural. Consistency with controlled tempo yields better development than grinding through sloppy reps. Trust the process, respect your joint limits, and master the pattern before adding resistance.
Common mistakes
Lifters frequently compromise this exercise by initiating the press before establishing scapular depression, which forces the upper traps to dominate and creates unnecessary neck tension. Many also overextend the lumbar spine as fatigue sets in, using momentum from the lower back to push through sticking points rather than relying on strict shoulder mechanics. Another frequent error involves an incomplete or rushed wrist rotation that eliminates the extended range of motion, effectively turning the Arnold press into a standard overhead press and robbing the anterior deltoids of their primary stimulus. Finally, dropping the dumbbells too quickly on the eccentric phase removes time under tension and increases joint shear forces at the bottom of the movement.
- Sets
- 3
- Reps
- 8-12
- Rest
- 90s
- Tempo
- 2-0-2-0
- Frequency
- 2-3x/week
Increase dumbbell weight by 2.5 to 5 lbs once you can complete all sets at the top of the rep range with strict, controlled form.
Muscles
- Shoulders
- Triceps
- Abs
Equipment
- Bench
- Dumbbells