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Positions and techniques to support your wrists while benching
The bench press has been a standard upper-body weight training exercise for as long as anybody can remember, but it can take a while to master the lift. If you’re having problems keeping your wrists straight while bench pressing, you’re not alone. However, you can fix this by using proper bench pressing technique to avoid hurting your wrists and make real strength gains. In this article, we'll explain everything you need to know. Scroll down to get started!
Don’t load the bar with so much weight that it’s super hard to lift or you can end up hurting your shoulders, wrists, and other body parts. Lifting too much weight forces your body into painful and risky positions.[1]
Sit on the end of the bench and lie down with your back flat on the bench and your feet flat on the ground. Make sure you can reach the bar comfortably with your arms fully extended.[2]
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Grab the bar tightly in your fists, with your arms at about shoulder width, so the bar sits in the grooves between your thumbs and the bottoms of your index fingers. Clench your thumbs tightly around the bar.[3]
Keep a tight grip on the bar, keep your wrists straight, and push up with your arms. Push the bar up off the rack until its above your shoulders and your elbows are locked.[4]
Bend your elbows out slowly to the sides of your chest to lower the bar straight down in a controlled motion. Stop when the bar is just above the midpoint of your chest and your elbows are just below the side edges of the bench.[5]
Straighten your arms, with your wrists in a neutral position, and tuck your elbows in at your sides to push the bar up. Raise the bar until it’s back above your shoulders in the starting position with your elbows locked again.[6]
Carefully lower the bar back onto the rack. Make sure the bar is secure before you release the tension and let go of it.[7]
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Buy a pair of 24 in (61 cm) long wrist wraps from a sporting goods store or online for good support. Wear them when you want to increase the weight you’re lifting to an amount that is too heavy for your current wrist strength.[8]
Pinch the end of the wrap between your thumb and palm to hold it in place or put your thumb through the thumb loop, if it has one. Bend your wrist forward at about a 45-degree angle with the wrap held firmly in place to get started.[9]
Pull the fabric to about about 60% of the maximum tightness that you’re able to. Wrap it 1 time around the bottom of your palm and across the back of the top of your wrist for the first pass around your wrist.[10]
Make 1 more full revolution with the wrap around the inside and back of your wrist. This time, wrap the fabric at about 80% of the maximum tightness that you’re able to.[11]
Pass the wrist wrap 1 more time around your wrist, just below the bottom of your palm. Wrap it as tightly as you can for this final pass and press the Velcro into place to secure the end.[12]
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Question
Is it okay if your wrists hurt after doing a bench press?
Laila Ajani is a Fitness Trainer and founder of Push Personal Fitness, a personal training organization based in the San Francisco Bay Area. With over 13 years as a trainer and exercise specialist, Laila has expertise in competitive athletics (gymnastics, powerlifting, and tennis), personal training, distance running, and Olympic lifting. Laila is certified by the National Strength & Conditioning Association (NSCA), and USA Powerlifting (USAPL), and she is a Corrective Exercise Specialist (CES).
Fitness Trainer
Expert Answer
No, wrist pain of any kind after doing a bench press, push up, or any kind of exercise like that should be investigated. If you're doing these exercises properly, your wrists shouldn't hurt.
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Get a spotter to help you rack and unrack the barbell when you’re lifting heavy to avoid putting unnecessary strain on your wrists.[13]
Try warming up your wrists before you bench press by interlocking your fingers and rolling your wrists back and forth in all directions for a few minutes before you start lifting.[14]
If you’re experiencing wrist pain from benching, try lifting less weight or switch to other chest-building exercises like the dumbbell bench press to strain yourself less.[15]
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Don’t use wrist wraps every single time you bench press or your wrists will actually get weaker over time. Only use them on your heaviest sets where you struggle to keep your wrists straight.[16]
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