Barbell Overhead Press
A standing barbell press from shoulders to lockout. The original strength benchmark for the upper body.
What is the barbell overhead press?
The barbell overhead press is a standing strict press: bar at shoulder level, you drive it overhead to lockout while staying tall, then lower under control. Unlike its push-press cousin, no leg drive is allowed. It builds shoulder strength, triceps power, mid-back stability and a rock-solid trunk, since the whole body has to brace under load. Before bench presses existed, this was the lift that defined a strong man. See the canonical "overhead-press" guide for the full breakdown.
How to do the barbell overhead press
Common mistakes
- Leaning back excessively. A big arch turns the press into an incline bench and crushes the lumbar spine. Stay vertical, squeeze the glutes.
- Pressing in front of the face. Finishing with the bar in front of you puts the shoulder in a weak position. Tuck the head and finish overhead.
- Soft midsection. Without a braced core the load dumps into the lower back. Big breath, tight ribs, every rep.
- Using leg drive. Any knee dip turns it into a push press. Keep legs locked for a true strict press.
Variations & progressions
Seated dumbbell press
Sitting removes the core demand and dumbbells let each shoulder move independently.
Push press
Add a controlled dip and drive from the legs. Lets you load 15-25 percent heavier than a strict press.
Landmine press
Pressing one end of a barbell in a landmine attachment is friendlier on the shoulder for limited mobility.
How to program it
Three protocols by goal. Pick one per cycle and aim for progression on load or distance.
| Goal | Sets × Distance | Load | Rest |
|---|---|---|---|
| Strength | 5 × 5 | 80-85% 1RM | 2-3 min |
| Hypertrophy | 4 × 8 | 70-75% 1RM | 90 s |
| Peaking | 5 × 2 | 90% 1RM | 3-4 min |
Add the barbell overhead press to your ZON program
Track load, distance and progression in one timeline.




