bench-press-flat-barbell

Barbell Flat Bench Press

The flat barbell bench press is the foundational horizontal pressing movement, driving chest, anterior deltoid, and triceps development through a full range of motion while lying supine on a flat bench. It is the root of the bench press family and the standard upper-body pressing test.

Muscles 9
Muscle groups 5
Joint groups 3
Joints 4
Contraindications 5
Substitutions 15
Name variants 6
Execution phases 3

Definition

Movement summary

Library description

The barbell flat bench press is the most widely prescribed upper-body pressing movement and the standard against which other press variants are compared. Lying supine on a flat bench eliminates lower-body contribution, isolating the pressing muscles under load. The sternal (mid and lower) pectoralis major is the primary mover, with the clavicular head contributing as the bar moves off the chest, and the anterior deltoid and triceps acting as synergists throughout the press. The fixed barbell path demands bilateral coordination and allows heavy loading, making it effective for both strength and hypertrophy. Adequate shoulder mobility into horizontal abduction and external rotation is needed to touch the chest safely at the bottom of each rep.

Taxonomy

Classification

Pattern
Push
Type
Compound
Category
Strength Powerlifting
Super family
Upper Push Horizontal
Family
Bench Press
Family root
Yes
Family ratio
1
Laterality
Bilateral
Plane
Transverse
Body position
Supine
Weight bearing
None
Impact
None
Balance demand
None
Technical demand
Intermediate
Popularity
Core
Grip
Pronated
Spotting
Required

Programming

Programming data

Intensity models
%1RM, RPE, RIR, Absolute kg
Base tempo
3 1 2 0
Time based
No
Variation tags
Flat
Control credit
Moderate
Control signals
High Bracing Demand
Coverage tags
Upper Push, Horizontal Push
Recovery cost
High

Equipment

Setup

Equipment tier
4
Group
Free Weight
Equipment
Barbell
Primary equipment
Barbell
Required setup
Flat Bench, Rack
Optional accessories
Barbell Clips, Lifting Belt, Wrist Wraps

Names

Aliases

Bench Press Synonym Flat Bench Synonym Barbell Bench Press Synonym Barbell Flat Bench Press (Olympic Bar) Attachment / Olympic Bar Barbell Flat Bench Press (Swiss Bar) Attachment / Swiss Bar Barbell Flat Bench Press (Wide Grip) Grip / Wide

Muscles

Engagement profile

Muscle group engagement

Chest Primary
Triceps Complex Secondary
Deltoids Secondary
Abdominals Stabiliser
Lats Stabiliser

Individual muscles

Muscle Tier Region
Pectoralis Major Primary Sternal
Pectoralis Major Secondary Clavicular
Deltoid Secondary Anterior
Triceps Brachii Secondary Lateral Head
Triceps Brachii Secondary Medial Head
Triceps Brachii Secondary Long Head
Serratus Anterior Stabiliser None
Latissimus Dorsi Stabiliser None
Transversus Abdominis Stabiliser None

Joints

Load profile

Joint group risk

Shoulder Moderate

Compression, Stretch

Elbow Low

Compression

Wrist Low

Compression, Stabilisation

Individual joint mechanisms

Joint Severity Mechanisms
Glenohumeral Joint Moderate Compression, Stretch, End Range
Acromioclavicular Joint Low Compression
Elbow Joint Low Compression
Radiocarpal Joint Low Compression, Stabilisation

Execution

Setup and phases

Lie supine on a flat bench with eyes directly under the bar. Plant feet flat on the floor with a slight arch in the lower back — upper back and glutes stay in contact with the bench. Grip the bar slightly wider than shoulder-width using a full overhand grip with thumbs wrapped around the bar. Retract and depress the shoulder blades to create a stable pressing platform. Unrack the bar with straight arms and position it directly over the shoulder joint.

Phase 1

Descent

Lower the bar under control (2-3 seconds) to the lower chest, roughly at nipple line level. Keep the elbows at approximately 45-75 degrees from the torso — not flared out to 90 degrees. Maintain retracted shoulder blades throughout. The forearms should be vertical when viewed from the front at the bottom position.

Phase 2

Bottom position

Brief contact with the chest — the bar touches but does not bounce. Maintain full-body tightness, shoulder blade retraction, and leg drive readiness. Do not relax or let the shoulders protract.

Phase 3

Press

Drive the bar upward and slightly back toward the rack by extending the elbows and horizontally adducting the shoulders. The bar path follows a slight arc from lower chest to above the shoulder joint at lockout. Push through the full foot to maintain leg drive and arch stability. Lock out elbows fully at the top without losing shoulder blade retraction.

Breathing

Inhale and brace before lowering the bar. Hold the brace through the descent and bottom position. Exhale forcefully as the bar passes the sticking point during the press. Avoid prolonged breath-holding — breath-holding under heavy load raises blood pressure.

Recommended tempo

3-1-2-0

Use this as the base tempo unless the programmed assignment or your coach specifies otherwise.

Coaching cues

Cues

  • Squeeze your shoulder blades together and down
  • Lower to the chest, elbows at about 45 degrees
  • Drive the bar up and slightly back
  • Push your feet into the floor throughout the press
  • Lock out fully without losing your upper-back tightness

Common mistakes

Mistakes

  • Flaring elbows to 90 degrees, placing excessive stress on the shoulder joint
  • Bouncing the bar off the chest to generate momentum
  • Losing shoulder blade retraction during the press (shoulders rolling forward)
  • Lifting the hips off the bench to shorten the range of motion
  • Uneven bar path or pressing the bar too far toward the face

Adaptation rules

Modifications

  • Use a controlled range of motion — stop the bar 2-3 cm above the chest if shoulder mobility is limited
  • Start with a lighter bar or Smith machine to build confidence with the bar path before free-weight loading
  • Use a spotter or set safety pins/arms at chest height to enable safe failure

Constraints

Contraindications and progressions

Contraindications

Condition Recommendation Notes
Rotator Cuff Tear Avoid Heavy horizontal pressing places significant stretch and compression through the glenohumeral joint. Substitute with machine chest press or reduce load and range significantly.
Shoulder Impingement Modify Reduce the descent depth — stopping 2–3 cm above the chest limits impingement provocation. Widen or narrow grip width to find a pain-free position. If symptoms persist, switch to dumbbell variant.
Uncontrolled Hypertension Modify Heavy loading requires significant Valsalva manoeuvre, which spikes intra-thoracic pressure and blood pressure. Use lighter loads with continuous breathing and avoid grinding maximal efforts.
Osteoporosis Modify Risk of wrist and rib fracture under high axial load. Use moderate loads with a secure grip. Avoid maximal or near-maximal efforts. Ensure wrist is stacked over the bar.
Rheumatoid Arthritis Modify Wrist and elbow joint involvement may preclude heavy pronated gripping. Use wrist wraps for support, reduce load, and monitor for joint inflammation after sessions.

Easier paths

  • Machine chest press
  • Push-up (incline or standard)
  • Dumbbell bench press (lighter load)

Harder paths

  • Close-grip bench press
  • Pause bench press
  • Incline barbell bench press

Substitutions

Alternatives, regressions, and variations

Alternative

Weighted Dip

Both are heavy compound pressing movements for upper body strength

EquipmentGoal
Alternative

Machine Chest Press Linear

Barbell bench for progressive overload when machine is unavailable

Equipment
Alternative

Medicine Ball Chest Pass

Bench press for strength; chest pass for power and rate of force development

Goal
Alternative

Machine Chest Press

Machine press trains same pattern with guided path and no spotter needed

EquipmentSetupSkill
Alternative

Push-Up

Bodyweight horizontal push when no bench or barbell available

EquipmentSetup
Alternative

Weighted Push-Up

Barbell bench for more precise load selection

EquipmentGoal
Regression

Floor Press

Full bench press adds bottom-range ROM that floor press eliminates

Range Of Motion
Variation

Tempo Bench Press

Standard bench without tempo prescription allows self-selected speed

Goal
Variation

Close-Grip Bench Press

Narrow grip shifts emphasis to triceps

Goal
Variation

Barbell Decline Bench Press

Decline shifts emphasis to lower chest fibres

Goal
Variation

Dumbbell Flat Bench Press

Dumbbell version allows greater ROM and independent arm work

Equipment
Variation

Barbell Incline Bench Press

Incline shifts emphasis to upper chest and anterior deltoids

Goal
Variation

Pause Bench Press

Standard bench press without pause allows stretch-shortening cycle

Goal
Variation

Smith Machine Bench Press

Free barbell bench requires more stabiliser engagement

Equipment
Variation

Smith Machine Flat Bench Press

Smith machine provides fixed bar path, useful without a spotter

EquipmentSetup