Dumbbell Shoulder Shrugs
A simple isolation movement that builds thick upper traps, stronger carries and a more bulletproof neck.

What is the dumbbell shoulder shrugs?
Dumbbell shrugs target the upper trapezius. You stand tall, hold a dumbbell in each hand by your sides, and elevate the shoulders straight up toward the ears, then lower under control. Despite their reputation as a vanity lift, they have real carryover: stronger traps mean stronger grip endurance under heavy carries, a more stable shoulder girdle for overhead work, and better posture under fatigue. A staple for Hyrox athletes carrying farmer's-walk loads.
How to do the dumbbell shoulder shrugs
Common mistakes
- Rolling the shoulders. Old-school circular shrugs add stress to the shoulder capsule without helping the traps. Straight up, straight down.
- Using momentum. Bouncing through reps means the traps barely work. Slow tempo, no swing.
- Bending the elbows. Curling the dumbbells turns it into a row. Keep arms straight, hinge from the shoulders only.
- Short range. Tiny pulses at the top with heavy load look hardcore but build nothing. Full depression at the bottom, full elevation at the top.
Variations & progressions
Light dumbbell with 3 s hold
10 to 15 kg dumbbells with a 3-second peak hold. Builds the mind-muscle connection without overloading the neck.
Heavy barbell or trap-bar shrug
Trap-bar shrugs load the heaviest with the cleanest mechanics. Add straps and chase weight once dumbbell form is dialed.
Heavy farmer's carry
Heavy carries train the traps isometrically along with grip and core. More functional, equally effective for trap thickness.
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 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hypertrophy | 4 × 12-15 | 20-30 kg per hand | 60-90 s |
| Strength | 5 × 6-8 | 35-50 kg per hand | 90 s |
| Carry support | 3 × 10 with 2 s hold | 25-40 kg per hand | 60 s |
Add the dumbbell shoulder shrugs to your ZON program
Track load, distance and progression in one timeline.




