Smith Seated Shoulder Press exercise animation (Hombre)

Smith Seated Shoulder Press

Músculo objetivo
Deltoid Anterior
Músculos sinergistas
Deltoid Lateral, Pectoralis Major Clavicular Head, Serratus Anterior, Triceps Brachii
Equipamiento
Smith machine
Parte del cuerpo
Shoulders
Tipo
Strength

The Smith seated shoulder press is a machine-guided overhead pressing exercise that primarily targets the anterior deltoid, with strong support from the lateral deltoid, clavicular pectoralis major, serratus anterior, and triceps brachii. The fixed bar path of the Smith machine reduces stabilizer demand, making it an effective option for isolating shoulder strength, training through fatigue safely, or building pressing volume for beginners and intermediate lifters.

Cómo hacer el Smith Seated Shoulder Press

  1. 1Set a bench to 90 degrees (fully upright) and position it centered under the Smith machine bar so that when you sit down, the bar aligns with the top of your chest at roughly chin-to-upper-chest height.
  2. 2Set the safety stops on both sides of the Smith machine just below shoulder height so you can bail out safely if needed.
  3. 3Sit on the bench with your feet flat on the floor, spine neutral, and chest up. Unrack the bar by rotating it forward off the hooks.
  4. 4Grip the bar slightly wider than shoulder-width with an overhand (pronated) grip. Keep your wrists stacked directly above your elbows.
  5. 5Brace your core and retract your shoulder blades to create a stable upper-back platform. Your lower back should maintain a natural curve — avoid excessive arching.
  6. 6Lower the bar in a controlled manner to just below chin height, keeping your elbows at roughly 60–75 degrees in front of your torso. Do not let the bar drift behind your head.
  7. 7Press the bar straight up along the Smith machine track by driving through your shoulders and extending your elbows until your arms are nearly locked out overhead.
  8. 8Pause briefly at the top, then lower the bar back to the starting position under control to complete one rep.
  9. 9After your final rep, rotate the bar back onto the hooks to re-rack it safely.

Consejos de técnica

  • Set the safety catches before every set — the Smith machine's hooks allow you to bail at any point by rotating the bar inward, so always have them positioned just below your starting position.
  • Press the bar directly in front of your head, not behind your neck. Behind-the-neck pressing places extreme stress on the cervical spine and rotator cuff tendons and should be avoided on the Smith machine.
  • Keep your elbows slightly in front of the bar path rather than flared straight out to the sides — this reduces impingement risk and keeps the anterior deltoid maximally loaded.
  • Control the eccentric (lowering) phase over 2–3 seconds to maximize time under tension and maintain shoulder stability throughout the range of motion.
  • Adjust seat height so that at the bottom of the press your elbows are at or just below shoulder level — too low forces your shoulder into an impingement-prone position.

Errores comunes

  • Pressing behind the neck: routing the bar behind the head to the base of the skull places the cervical spine and rotator cuff in a vulnerable, impingement-prone position and significantly increases injury risk.
  • Using excessively wide grip: a grip too far outside shoulder-width overloads the AC joint and limits the range of motion through which the deltoids can contract effectively.
  • Skipping the safety stops: leaving catches unset means a failed rep has no safe exit — always set them before loading weight.
  • Letting the lower back hyper-extend: excessive arch shifts load off the deltoids, compresses the lumbar spine, and increases the risk of lower-back strain under heavy loads.
  • Rushing the descent: dropping the bar quickly removes the eccentric stimulus, reduces total muscle tension, and makes it harder to control the bar at the bottom — increasing shoulder strain.

Preguntas frecuentes

What muscles does the Smith seated shoulder press work?

The Smith seated shoulder press primarily targets the anterior deltoid (front of the shoulder). Key synergists include the lateral deltoid, clavicular head of the pectoralis major (upper chest), serratus anterior, and triceps brachii, which all assist with pressing the bar overhead and stabilizing the shoulder joint.

What is the difference between the Smith machine shoulder press and a barbell shoulder press?

The Smith machine constrains the bar to a fixed vertical (or slightly angled) track, which reduces the demand on stabilizing muscles such as the rotator cuff and core. This makes it easier to focus on the deltoids, useful for beginners or lifters training to failure without a spotter. A free-weight barbell press recruits more total muscle mass due to the balance and stabilization requirements, but also increases technical difficulty and injury risk if form breaks down.

Should I press in front of or behind my neck on the Smith machine?

Always press in front of your head. Behind-the-neck pressing on any machine or bar puts the cervical spine in extreme flexion and places the shoulder joint in a position that stresses the rotator cuff and AC joint. The risk of injury far outweighs any perceived benefit, and front pressing achieves equivalent or superior anterior deltoid activation.

What grip width should I use for the Smith seated shoulder press?

A grip slightly wider than shoulder-width — roughly where your forearms form a near-vertical line when the bar is at shoulder height — is optimal. This grip maximizes deltoid activation and keeps the wrists and elbows in a mechanically efficient position. Going too wide stresses the AC joint; too narrow shifts more load to the triceps.

How many sets and reps should I do for the Smith seated shoulder press?

For strength, 3–5 sets of 4–6 reps with heavier loads works well. For hypertrophy (muscle growth), 3–4 sets of 8–12 reps at a moderate weight with controlled tempo is most effective. Beginners can start with 2–3 sets of 10–15 reps to build technique and baseline shoulder endurance. Allow 60–90 seconds rest between sets for hypertrophy and 2–3 minutes for strength-focused work.

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