
Dumbbell Incline One Arm Hammer Press
- Músculo objetivo
- —
- Equipamiento
- Dumbbell
- Parte del cuerpo
- Upper Arms
- Tipo
- Strength
The dumbbell incline one arm hammer press is a single-arm upper-body pressing exercise done on an incline bench with a neutral (hammer) grip. Pressing one dumbbell at a time with the palm facing inward works the chest, front shoulder, and triceps while challenging your core to resist twisting. It is a good way to build pressing strength one side at a time and even out left-to-right imbalances.
Cómo hacer el Dumbbell Incline One Arm Hammer Press
- 1Set an adjustable bench to a moderate incline of about 30–45 degrees and sit back against it with a single dumbbell resting on your thigh.
- 2Use your leg to help drive the dumbbell up as you lie back, then hold it at shoulder level with a neutral grip so your palm faces inward toward your midline.
- 3Plant both feet on the floor, pull your shoulder blades down and back, and brace your core to keep your torso from rotating.
- 4Press the dumbbell straight up over your upper chest until your arm is fully extended, keeping your wrist stacked over your elbow.
- 5Pause briefly at the top without letting the dumbbell drift across your body.
- 6Lower the dumbbell under control back to shoulder level, keeping your elbow tucked at a comfortable angle to your torso.
- 7Complete all your reps on one side, then switch the dumbbell to the other arm and repeat for an equal number of reps.
- 8Finish by lowering the dumbbell to your thigh and setting it down safely.
Consejos de técnica
- Keep your palm facing inward throughout the set; the neutral hammer grip is what defines the movement and tends to be easier on the shoulder than a flared, palms-forward press.
- Brace your abs and squeeze your free-side glute to stop your torso from twisting toward the working arm.
- Move through a full range of motion, pressing to a full lockout and lowering until you feel a controlled stretch at shoulder level.
- Start with a lighter dumbbell than you would use for a two-arm press, since the single-arm load makes stabilizing harder.
- Match the reps on both sides so you build balanced strength rather than reinforcing your stronger arm.
Errores comunes
- Letting your torso rotate or your hips shift toward the working side, which wastes effort and stresses the lower back instead of training the press.
- Rotating the dumbbell to a palms-forward position, which turns it into a standard press rather than the neutral-grip hammer movement.
- Using too much weight and cutting the range of motion short, so you lose the stretch and tension that drive results.
- Letting the wrist bend backward under the load instead of keeping it stacked over the elbow, which strains the wrist joint.
- Doing more reps on your dominant arm, which deepens left-to-right imbalances over time.
Preguntas frecuentes
What muscles does the dumbbell incline one arm hammer press work?
Pressing on an incline with a neutral grip trains the chest, front shoulder, and triceps. Because you press one side at a time, your core also works to keep your torso from twisting.
Why use a one-arm version instead of pressing both dumbbells together?
Working one arm at a time lets you focus on each side individually, which helps expose and correct left-to-right strength imbalances. It also adds an anti-rotation core challenge that the two-arm version does not.
What incline angle should I use?
A moderate incline of about 30–45 degrees works well. Lower angles bias more toward the mid-chest, while steeper angles shift more emphasis to the upper chest and front shoulder.
How many sets and reps should I do?
For most lifters, 3–4 sets of 8–12 reps per arm is a solid range. Start lighter than usual to learn the single-arm balance, then add weight as your control improves.
Is the dumbbell incline one arm hammer press good for beginners?
Yes. The neutral grip is shoulder-friendly and a single dumbbell is easy to control, though beginners should start light and keep the torso stable before adding load.







