Primary Muscles
Pectoralis major (chest), anterior deltoid, triceps brachii
The king of upper-body hypertrophy and strength — when done properly, the highest activation for chest, triceps and front delts.
3D animation — watch the full movement
Pectoralis major (chest), anterior deltoid, triceps brachii
Serratus anterior, lower trapezius, core
Olympic bar (20 kg / 45 lb), flat bench, plates, safety bars
Gym
Intermediate (spotter required)
Rough benchmarks: beginner ~50% bodyweight, intermediate ~100%, advanced ~150%, elite ~200%+. For an 80 kg man that's 40/80/120/160 kg. Add load at 2-5%/week — jumping faster invites injury.
Yes — one of the highest chest-activation lifts. But not enough alone. Combine with incline (upper chest), decline (lower chest) and fly (isolation).
Initially yes, but progress requires more load. Plate-loaded push-ups or single-arm variants are awkward — barbell benching is a more practical progression.
The bodyweight classic — works chest, shoulders, triceps and core in a single compound movement.
Sets, reps, rest and weekly progression tailored to your profile.