Exercises Chest Incline Dumbbell Press

Incline Dumbbell Press: Correct Form & Working Weight

Upper Chest primary Dumbbells, Incline Bench Beginner Compound · Push

The incline dumbbell press combines the upper chest targeting of the incline angle with the independent arm movement of dumbbells. It allows a deeper stretch at the bottom and more natural pressing path than the barbell version.

Front Back
Upper Chestprimary
Triceps, Front Deltoidssecondary

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Incline Dumbbell Press Video Tutorial

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How to Do the Incline Dumbbell Press

  1. Set an adjustable bench to 30-45 degrees. Sit with a dumbbell in each hand on your thighs, then kick them up as you lie back.
  2. Press the dumbbells to arm's length above your upper chest, palms facing forward. Retract shoulder blades into the bench.
  3. Inhale and lower both dumbbells in a controlled arc until they're level with your upper chest. Allow a deep stretch.
  4. Pause at the bottom, then press back up and slightly inward so the dumbbells nearly touch at the top. Exhale.
  5. Lock out at the top. That's one rep. When finished, bring dumbbells to your thighs and sit up.

Incline Dumbbell Press Mistakes to Avoid

Bench angle too steep — above 45° turns it into a shoulder press. Keep at 30-45° for upper chest focus.
Not going deep enough — the main advantage of dumbbells is the extra stretch. Lower until you feel a deep chest stretch.
Dumbbells drifting apart at the bottom — keep the path controlled. Imagine pressing along two rails.
Dropping dumbbells at the end — risks shoulder injury. Lower to thighs and sit up controlled.

Incline Dumbbell Press Muscles Worked

The incline dumbbell press targets the clavicular (upper) head of the pectoralis major. The independent arm movement recruits more stabilizers than the barbell version, while the triceps and front deltoids assist.

Incline Dumbbell Press Alternatives

Incline Barbell PressWant to go heavier — barbell allows more total load
Low Cable CrossoverWant to isolate upper chest with constant tension
Incline Dumbbell FlyeWant more stretch and isolation — flyes remove tricep involvement
Decline Push-UpNo bench — decline push-ups hit a similar angle with bodyweight

Incline Dumbbell Press Programming

Strength
4 × 5-8
sets × reps
Rest 2-3 min
Hypertrophy
3 × 8-12
sets × reps
Rest 90 sec
Endurance
3 × 12-15
sets × reps
Rest 60 sec

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Incline Dumbbell Press FAQ

Incline dumbbell or barbell press — which is better?
Dumbbells give more range of motion, independent arm work, and a deeper stretch. Barbell allows heavier loads. Use dumbbells for hypertrophy, barbell for strength, or alternate both.
How heavy should incline dumbbell press be?
Typically 70-80% of what you'd use per side on flat dumbbell press. If you flat press 30kg dumbbells, start incline with 22-25kg.
How many sets of incline press per week?
6-12 total sets of incline pressing per week is effective for upper chest development. This can be split across 2-3 sessions with different variations.
Should I bring the dumbbells together at the top?
Nearly together but not touching — bringing them to full contact lets the chest relax. Stopping just short keeps tension on the muscle at the top.