Exercises Chest Incline Barbell Press

Incline Barbell Press: Correct Form & Working Weight

Upper Chest primary Barbell, Incline Bench Beginner Compound · Push

The incline barbell press targets the upper portion of the chest by pressing at a 30-45° angle. It builds the upper chest and front deltoids more than the flat bench, creating a fuller, more balanced chest.

Front Back
Upper Chestprimary
Triceps, Front Deltoidssecondary

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Incline Barbell Press Video Tutorial

Video tutorial coming soon

How to Do the Incline Barbell Press

  1. Set an adjustable bench to 30-45 degrees. Lie back and plant your feet flat on the floor. Retract your shoulder blades.
  2. Grip the bar slightly wider than shoulder-width. Unrack and hold it at arm's length directly above your upper chest.
  3. Inhale and lower the bar to your upper chest, just below the collarbone. Keep elbows at about 45 degrees.
  4. Touch your upper chest lightly without bouncing. Brief pause.
  5. Press the bar back up to the starting position. Exhale as you push. Lock out at the top.

Incline Barbell Press Mistakes to Avoid

Setting the bench too steep (60°+) — turns it into a shoulder press. Keep the angle at 30-45° for upper chest emphasis.
Lowering the bar to the mid/lower chest — misses the upper chest. Aim for the collarbone area.
Flaring elbows to 90° — stresses the shoulders. Keep elbows at 45° to your torso.
Not retracting shoulder blades — reduces stability and chest activation. Pinch them together before unracking.

Incline Barbell Press Muscles Worked

The incline press primarily targets the clavicular (upper) head of the pectoralis major, with significant work from the front deltoids and triceps. The steeper the angle, the more shoulder-dominant it becomes.

Incline Barbell Press Alternatives

Incline Dumbbell PressWant more range of motion and independent arm work
Low Cable CrossoverWant to isolate the upper chest with constant cable tension
Barbell Bench PressWant to hit the full chest with heavier loads on a flat angle
Decline Push-UpNo bench — decline push-ups mimic the incline press angle with bodyweight

Incline Barbell Press Programming

Strength
4 × 4-6
sets × reps
Rest 3 min
Hypertrophy
3 × 8-12
sets × reps
Rest 90 sec
Endurance
3 × 12-15
sets × reps
Rest 60 sec

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Incline Barbell Press FAQ

What angle should the incline bench be?
30-45 degrees is the sweet spot for upper chest emphasis. Below 30° is barely different from flat. Above 45° shifts too much work to the shoulders. Most lifters do best at 30°.
Is incline press harder than flat bench?
Yes — most people incline press about 15-25% less than their flat bench. The upper chest is smaller than the full pec, and the shoulders work harder at an angle.
Should I do incline or flat bench first?
Do whichever you want to prioritize first while you're freshest. If your upper chest is lagging, start with incline. If overall strength is the goal, start with flat.
Can incline press replace flat bench?
It can be your primary chest exercise, yes. Some coaches argue incline is better for overall chest development because the upper chest is harder to target. But ideally, do both.