
Dumbbell Row with Chest Supported
- Zielmuskel
- —
- Equipment
- Dumbbell
- Körperregion
- Back
- Typ
- Strength
The chest-supported dumbbell row is a back exercise performed lying chest-down on an incline bench, rowing a pair of dumbbells toward your hips and torso. By bracing your chest against the pad, it removes lower-back and momentum involvement and lets you focus purely on the back, lats, mid-back, and rear delts.
Dumbbell Row with Chest Supported: So führst du sie aus
- 1Set an incline bench to roughly 30–45° and grab a pair of dumbbells.
- 2Lie chest-down on the pad with your torso supported, feet planted on the floor or footrest for stability.
- 3Let the dumbbells hang straight down at arm's length, palms facing each other and shoulder blades relaxed.
- 4Brace your core and pull the dumbbells up and back toward your hips, leading with your elbows.
- 5Squeeze your shoulder blades together at the top, keeping your elbows close to your sides.
- 6Pause briefly at the top with the dumbbells near your lower ribs or hips.
- 7Lower the dumbbells under control until your arms are fully extended and your shoulder blades stretch forward.
- 8Complete your reps, then set the dumbbells down safely before standing up.
Technik-Tipps
- Keep your chest pinned to the pad for the entire set so the bench, not momentum, does the stabilizing.
- Drive with your elbows rather than your hands to keep the pull focused on your back instead of your arms.
- Pause and squeeze at the top of each rep to maximize mid-back and lat contraction.
- Use a full range of motion, letting the dumbbells stretch your back at the bottom and rowing all the way up.
Häufige Fehler
- Lifting your chest off the pad to heave the weight up, which reintroduces the momentum and lower-back strain the exercise is meant to remove.
- Pulling with the hands and biceps instead of the back, which turns it into an arm exercise and shortchanges the lats.
- Cutting the range of motion short at the bottom, which loses the stretch and reduces back development.
- Shrugging the shoulders up toward the ears, which shifts tension to the traps and away from the mid-back.
Häufig gestellte Fragen
What muscles does the chest-supported dumbbell row work?
It targets the back as a whole — the lats, mid-back, and rear delts — while the biceps assist with the pull. The chest support takes the lower back and momentum out of the movement.
What angle should I set the bench to?
An incline of roughly 30–45° works well. A lower angle lengthens the range of motion, while a steeper angle can feel more comfortable for the lower back and easier to brace against.
Is the chest-supported dumbbell row good for beginners?
Yes. Because the bench supports your torso, it is easier to keep good form and harder to cheat with body English, making it a beginner-friendly way to learn back rowing.
How many sets and reps should I do?
For most lifters, 3–4 sets of 8–12 reps is a solid range for back development. Use a weight you can control through a full range of motion without rocking off the pad.







