StrengthIntermediate

Close-Grip Bench Press

A narrow-grip barbell press that shifts load from the chest to the triceps, the best builder for a strong bench lockout.

GIF · DemoClose-Grip Bench Press

What is the close-grip bench press?

The close-grip bench press is a barbell press performed with hands roughly shoulder-width or slightly inside. Elbows tuck close to the torso through the rep, which biases the triceps and front delts while still loading the chest. It's the gold-standard triceps builder for anyone who needs more lockout strength, and it carries directly to overhead pressing, dips and any pushing sport. Treat it like a main lift, not an accessory: it can be heavy.

How to do the close-grip bench press

1
Set a shoulder-width grip
Hands roughly shoulder-width on the bar, never narrower than 1.5 fist-widths. Closer wrecks the wrists without recruiting more triceps.
2
Lock the upper back
Squeeze shoulder blades back and down, slight arch, feet planted. Same setup as a regular bench, the grip is the only thing that changes.
3
Lower with tucked elbows
Bring the bar to the lower chest or upper abs, elbows hugging the ribcage at 20-30°. Don't flare, you'll lose triceps tension and stress the shoulders.
4
Press to a hard lockout
Drive straight up, finishing with elbows fully extended. Squeeze the triceps at the top for one count before the next rep.
Coach tip
If your wrists ache, your grip is too narrow. Widen to shoulder-width and focus on the elbow tuck. That's what makes it 'close', not the hands.

Common mistakes

  • Grip too narrow. Hands touching kills the wrists without adding triceps work. Shoulder-width is the sweet spot.
  • Flared elbows. Flaring turns it back into a regular bench. Keep the elbows tucked to the ribs throughout.
  • Bar drifts toward the neck. Touching too high stresses the shoulder. Lower the bar to the bottom of the sternum or upper abs.
  • Half-rep lockout. Stopping short skips the triceps' main job. Finish every rep with arms locked out hard.

Variations & progressions

Easier

Close-grip dumbbell press

Two dumbbells held neutral grip, pressed together throughout. Same triceps emphasis with less wrist strain.

Harder

Floor close-grip with chains

Bench from the floor with chains hanging from the bar. Pause at the bottom, drive through the heaviest part with accommodating resistance.

No barbell?

Diamond push-ups

Hands forming a diamond under the chest, elbows tucked. Bodyweight version of the same pattern, scale with feet on a box.

How to program it

Three protocols by goal. Pick one per cycle and aim for progression on load or distance.

GoalSets × DistanceLoadRest
Strength5 × 575-80% 1RM3 min
Hypertrophy4 × 8-10RPE 890 s
Lockout work6 × 3 from pinsHeavy2-3 min
Log every rep

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Close-Grip Bench Press FAQ

Close-grip or regular bench for bigger triceps?
Close-grip wins by a clear margin. The longer triceps moment arm and bigger elbow extension range load the muscle harder. Run both in the same week: regular bench for chest, close-grip for triceps and lockout. That combo builds the strongest, biggest arms long-term.
How narrow should my grip be?
Shoulder-width, give or take a thumb. Index fingers on the smooth ring of an Olympic bar is a reliable cue. Going narrower doesn't add triceps work, it just punishes the wrists and shoulders. If your wrists hurt, you're too narrow.
Can it replace skull crushers?
Mostly yes. Close-grip bench loads the triceps heavier and is safer on the elbows. Keep skull crushers as a finisher if you love them, but if elbow pain is a problem, close-grip can carry the entire triceps load. Pair it with overhead extensions for the long head.
Close-Grip Bench Press — Technique, muscles & programming | ZON