Skip to main content

The 13 best shoulder workouts for an outstanding upper body

Build stability, mobility, and flexibility with these shoulder exercises

Shirtless guy poses, showing off his deltoid muscles
Image used with permission by copyright holder

A pair of built, sizeable shoulders sitting on top of a guy’s torso is a telltale sign of someone who is not only aesthetic but functional as well. Strong and healthy shoulders are incredibly crucial for all of life’s tasks, especially as we age and begin to lose muscle density.

Recommended Videos

Shoulder injuries are disastrous, making even common daily tasks like carrying groceries painful. So, one of the best things that you can do is to stop neglecting your shoulders and make sure you do some of the best shoulder exercises to make them stronger, as well.

Luckily for you, we sat down and got some advice and a list of the best shoulder workouts from former Row House Master Coach, Gretchen Raddatz. “When you build stability, mobility, and flexibility in the muscles surrounding the shoulder joint, it keeps you injury-free,” said Raddatz.

Shoulder Anatomy — Joint and muscle

To help you get those large, 3D-rounded shoulders that will protect you from injury, we asked Raddatz to compile this step-by-step guide to the best shoulder workouts. These exercises can be incorporated into HIIT workouts for a full-body burn, or they can function as a stand-alone routine. To help you get the most out of your shoulder training, it’s important to understand some of the basic anatomy surrounding the shoulder joint, first.

These muscles are divided into two groups: extrinsic and intrinsic shoulder muscles. The extrinsic muscles include the trapezius, latissimus dorsi, rhomboids, and levator scapulae. The intrinsic muscles are the anterior, medial, and posterior deltoids, rotator cuff, and teres major. The exercises below are designed to hit all these muscles for an intense yet well-rounded shoulder workout. Adding the shoulder exercises into your weekly training will have you donning Death Star-like shoulders before you know it.

Older gentleman performing a reverse fly on a fly machine in a gym.
MDV Edwards / Shutterstock

Machine reverse fly

Muscles targeted: Deltoid (posterior), trapezius, and rhomboids
Reps: 12 to 15
Sets: 2 to 3

All too often, we prioritize the front and lateral deltoid heads while neglecting the posterior deltoid heads. If you truly want to build 3D shoulders, you should start shoulder training by performing three sets of higher reps with lower rest times to pre-fatigue your shoulders. Using a machine, cable, or bands, if necessary, is a great way to keep the overall load minimal while forcing large amounts of blood into your shoulders, which is key to muscle growth.

Keep weight to a minimal amount, higher reps, and minimal rest time, around 30 seconds, to get your shoulder routine off to a great start.

Bodybuilder doing shoulder press
BLACKDAY / Shutterstock

Overhead shoulder press

Muscles targeted: Deltoid (anterior, medial, and posterior) and trapezius
Reps: 12 to 15
Sets: 2 to 3

This exercise can be done standing or seated. With a dumbbell in each hand and holding the weights at the shoulders with an overhand grip, start with your feet hip-distance apart, keeping the back straight. Press up and bring the dumbbells together over your head, then slowly lower back to the starting position.

“Avoid arching your back by keeping the abdomen braced, glutes contracted during the press, and tipping the pelvis inward slightly,” Raddatz told us. “Lower the weights only to your shoulders.”

Once your shoulders are fit and used to the weight, you can add on the pounds and make this a low-rep, high-return muscle builder, but start lighter to stay safe.

Man holding a dumbbell in each hand raising his arms out in front of him until they are parallel to the floor
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Front delt raise

Muscles targeted: Anterior deltoid, medial/middle deltoid, and trapezius
Reps: 12 to 15
Sets: 2 to 3

With light weights, begin this exercise by standing with your feet about hip-distance apart. Holding a dumbbell in each hand, palms facing back — horizontal to the thighs — slowly raise your arms out in front of you until they are parallel to the floor, maintaining a small bend in the elbow. Hold, then lower slowly with control. Repeat.

“Avoid using momentum, and take your time on the way up and down,” Raddatz recommended. ” [Your] wrists should remain neutral, not bent.”

Guy in a gym performs a dumbbell lateral raise
User19708154 / Freepik

Lateral delt raise

Muscles targeted: Medial/middle deltoid, rotator cuff, and trapezius
Reps: 12 to 15
Sets: 2 to 3

Again, use light weights for this exercise. Begin standing with your feet about hip-distance apart and a dumbbell in each hand, palms facing in toward the body alongside the thighs with a slight bend in the elbow. Begin lifting the weights up and out to your sides. Once the arms are parallel to the floor (about even with your shoulder), bring the weight back down slowly with control. Repeat.

A note on form: Remember to brace the core, keep feet hip-distance apart, and pull your shoulders back and down. “If you rotate your hands, raising your pinkies slightly higher than your thumbs, you’ll feel more activation in the lateral deltoid muscle,” Raddatz said.

Man trying out a Bent-Over Reverse Fly with a dumbbell in each hand
Samsilitongajr / Pexels

Bent-over reverse fly

Muscles targeted: Posterior deltoid, trapezius, and rhomboids
Reps: 12 to 15
Sets: 2 to 3

The reverse fly is as much a back exercise as a shoulder exercise, but it can strengthen the lower muscles of the shoulder group and help support and protect your entire shoulder while also helping you build up that coveted V-shape. So bang ’em out.

Standing with feet shoulder-width apart, hinge forward at the hips to a 45-degree angle, keeping a slight bend in the knees. Grab a dumbbell in each hand, palms facing in. Lift the weights out to the sides of your body, squeezing the shoulder blades together and keeping a slight bend in the elbow. Bring the weights back down gently.

“Look down and maintain alignment through the neck and spine so you are not straining your neck,” Raddatz explained. “Avoid swinging/jerking the weights to bring them up. Keep it slow, steady, and smooth.”

Lifting weights in the mirror
Judith Haeusler / Alamy

Arnold press

Muscles targeted: Anterior, medial, and posterior deltoids and rotator cuff
Reps: 12 to 15
Sets: 2 to 3

This exercise hits all three muscles in the deltoid and works on rotational movement through the press portion of the lift. It helps increase shoulder stability, hitting the inside shoulder muscles at the bottom of the lift. This is one of the best shoulder workouts for using the heavier weights you have lying around your home gym.

Start with a dumbbell in each hand, feet hip-distance apart, keeping your back straight and core activated. Hold the weights at the shoulders with your palms facing the body. Start by taking the elbows out wider, rotating the wrists so the palms face forward as you bring the weights straight up overhead, and then move back down through it.

Man holding the dumbbells on each hand in front of his thighs, with his palms facing his body
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Upright row

Muscles targeted: Anterior, medial, and posterior deltoids and trapezius
Reps: 12 to 15
Sets: 2 to 3

This is one of the best shoulder exercises that can be done standing or seated and with heavier weights. Start by holding the weights in front of your thighs, palms facing the body. The feet should be hip- to shoulder-width apart, and you want to keep the weights close to your body as you pull them up toward your chest, letting the elbows flare out at about shoulder height. Bring the weights back down and repeat.

Man raising the dumbbells on each hand above his head
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Circle press

Muscles targeted: Trapezius, latissimus dorsi, rhomboids, levator scapulae, anterior, medial, and posterior deltoids, rotator cuff, and teres major
Reps: 12 to 15
Sets: 2 to 3

In a standing position with the feet hip- to shoulder-width apart, start with a pair of low-weight dumbbells. Hold them against the thighs with the palms facing forward, away from the body. Bring the dumbbells out to the side of the body and up overhead, and then reverse the movement back down. Repeat.

Man flexing his back and shoulders.
Nigel Msipa / Unsplash

More shoulder exercises (using no equipment)

If you find yourself traveling or somewhere you’re unable to have weights and other equipment to work your shoulders, here are some shoulder exercises you can do with just your body weight.

Wall pushups

Stand facing a wall with your arms shoulder-width apart and your hands flat against the wall at shoulder height. Slowly bend your elbows and lower your chest toward the wall until your elbows are bent at a 90-degree angle. Push back up to the starting position.

Pike pushups

Start in a pushup position with your hands shoulder-width apart and your feet together. Walk your hands forward until your hips are in the air and your body is forming an inverted V shape. Slowly bend your elbows and lower your chest toward the ground, keeping your hips high. Push back up to the starting position.

Bear crawls

Begin in a pushup position with your hands shoulder-width apart and your knees directly below your hips. Lift your knees off the ground and keep your back flat. Move one hand forward and follow with the opposite foot, alternating sides and staying low to the ground.

Shoulder taps

Start in a pushup position with your hands shoulder-width apart. Keep your arms fully extended with your back flat and toes on the ground. Bring one hand up off the ground and tap the opposite shoulder. Rotate back and forth tapping one shoulder at a time.

Arm circles

Stand with your arms at your sides and make small circles forward with your arms. Gradually increase the size of the circles until your arms are fully extended. Reverse the direction and make small circles backward.

While most upper body workouts will hit the shoulders to a certain degree, adding specific exercises or specific shoulder training days that target them solely will help them grow faster. Making sure to hit all heads of the deltoids is crucial to the success of building the biggest shoulder at your gym. These exercises will help you get there.

Jeff Turbett
Former Contributor
Jeff Turbett is a health and wellness coach with over three years of experience transforming clients lives and physical…
Topics
Can this simple activity lower the risk of 13 cancers? Interesting new study
Research shows walking can lower blood pressure and the symptoms of depression, but what about the risk of cancer?
man walking outside wearing glasses

When I’m not sitting at my computer, I’m trying to stretch my legs and get my muscles moving and my blood circulating. Researchers associated a sedentary lifestyle with a higher risk of cancer, cardiovascular disease, and metabolic diseases. Recently, I’ve covered the growing research on the benefits of exercise and on walking, which is natural, simple, accessible, and good for your body. 

For example, one study revealed that maintaining a brisk walking pace lowers your risk of developing dementia later in life. Walking can also improve your blood sugar, and just a 10-minute walk around the block can lower blood pressure and perk up your mood. Previous research has shown that physical activity can lower the risk of cancer, and a new study from the University of Oxford further explored this association. Does walking really lower your risk of cancer? Does more steps mean an even lower risk? Let’s look at the study.

Read more
If you love pickleball, try padel — the ultimate full-body workout in disguise
Boost your cardiovascular fitness and overall athletic performance with this fun, social sport.
Diego Valderrama expert padel coach playing padel

Pickleball and other racquet sports are booming in popularity as people become more interested in improving their fitness and wellness by playing fun, interactive games. Padel is picking up serious steam here in the U.S. as another beneficial racquet sport worth playing. Padel combines the best parts of tennis and squash, and courts are opening here, there, and everywhere. 

I find racquet sports fun because you’re swinging the paddle or racquet around and moving quickly, giving you a solid heart-pumping, calorie-burning workout. Research reveals that playing racquet sports regularly improves cardiovascular function and musculoskeletal health and promotes mental well-being. I caught up with certified padel coach Diego Valderrama to get his insight into this increasingly popular sport, including his top tips, and how it compares to other sports like tennis and pickleball. Valderrama trains everyone from beginners to professional athletes at one of the largest facilities in South Florida.

Read more
Traveling doesn’t have to wreck your workouts — this app proves it
Flykitt Fit

If you’re one of those travelers who also takes a 24/7 approach to staying in shape, you probably know how badly a busy itinerary can screw up your workouts. Crossing multiple time zones in a matter of hours may come with occasional thrills, but we’ve all had workouts that crashed and burned or simply didn’t happen after a long, exhausting flight.
Now there’s a travel app that’s designed to help with this problem. It's from Flykitt, which has already positioned itself as a leader when it comes to jet lag, and the company describes its new app feature as “the first AI fitness coach designed for travel.” The feature, Flykitt Fit, is designed for those who prioritize workouts when they hit the road, and it offers some appealing ways to make them better.

How Flykitt works for workouts

Read more