Assisted Weighted Push-up exercise animation (Hombre)

Assisted Weighted Push-up

Músculos sinergistas
Deltoid Anterior, Pectoralis Major Clavicular Head, Triceps Brachii
Equipamiento
Weighted
Parte del cuerpo
Chest
Tipo
Strength

The assisted weighted push-up is a chest strength exercise that loads a standard push-up with extra resistance placed on your back. It primarily targets the chest (pectoralis major, sternal head), with the front shoulders, upper chest (clavicular head), and triceps assisting. A partner places and steadies the weight so you can progress past bodyweight push-ups safely.

Cómo hacer el Assisted Weighted Push-up

  1. 1Get into a high plank with your hands slightly wider than shoulder-width and your body in a straight line from head to heels.
  2. 2Brace your core and squeeze your glutes so your hips neither sag nor pike up.
  3. 3Have a partner place a weight plate or weight vest across your upper back and hold it steady over your shoulder blades.
  4. 4Lower your chest toward the floor under control, keeping your elbows tucked at roughly a 45° angle to your torso.
  5. 5Stop when your chest is just above the floor, keeping your wrists stacked under your shoulders.
  6. 6Press back up by driving through your palms until your arms are fully extended, keeping your body in one rigid line.
  7. 7Complete your reps, then have your partner lift the weight off before you stand up.

Consejos de técnica

  • Keep your shoulder blades drawn down and slightly together so the load stays on your chest, not your neck.
  • Maintain a straight head-to-heel line throughout; brace as if someone were about to push you sideways.
  • Have your partner center the weight over your mid-back so it doesn't slide toward your neck or hips.
  • Start with a light plate and add load gradually once you can complete all reps with clean form.

Errores comunes

  • Letting your hips sag toward the floor, which strains the lower back and takes tension off the chest.
  • Flaring your elbows out to 90°, which shifts stress onto the shoulder joint instead of the chest.
  • Cutting the range short and not lowering your chest close to the floor, reducing chest activation.
  • Adding too much weight too soon, which breaks your form and raises the risk of a shoulder or wrist injury.

Preguntas frecuentes

What muscles does the assisted weighted push-up work?

It primarily works the chest (pectoralis major, sternal head), with the front deltoids, upper chest (clavicular head), and triceps acting as synergists.

Why is it called an assisted weighted push-up?

The weight (a plate or weight vest) makes it weighted, and a partner assists by placing and steadying the load on your back so you can focus on pushing with good form.

How much weight should I add?

Start light — a small plate or light vest — and only add load once you can complete all your reps with a straight body and full range of motion. Progress in small jumps.

Is the weighted push-up good for beginners?

Master the standard bodyweight push-up first. Once you can do clean, full-range reps comfortably, adding light weight is a good next step to keep building chest strength.

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