Incline Barbell Bench Press
The angled barbell press that builds the upper-chest shelf flat bench can't reach.

What is the incline barbell bench press?
The incline barbell bench press is a horizontal press performed on a bench set to roughly 30°. You unrack the bar, lower it to the upper chest just below the collarbone, then drive it back up to lockout. Compared to flat bench, the incline shifts load to the clavicular fibres of the pectoralis major and the anterior delts, which is exactly the area most lifters under-develop. It's also kinder on the shoulder joint at lower loads and a key lift for building visible upper-chest mass.
How to do the incline barbell bench press
Common mistakes
- Bench too steep. Above 45° it becomes a shoulder press in disguise. Keep 30°.
- Touching too high. Bar to the throat is a recipe for shoulder pain. Below the collarbone, not above.
- Glutes off the bench. Hips lifting turns the incline into a flat bench. Glutes glued.
- Loose upper back. No retraction = no platform = leaked force and angry shoulders. Pinch the blades hard.
Variations & progressions
Incline dumbbell press
Dumbbells let each shoulder track naturally and add range at the bottom. Better for hypertrophy and joint health.
Pause incline bench
Pause 2-3 s at the chest. Kills the bounce, exposes weakness off the bottom.
Low incline Smith press
Smith machine on a low incline lets you focus on the upper chest without stabilisation cost. Useful for high-rep work.
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% est. 1RM | 3 min |
| Hypertrophy | 4 × 8-10 | 70-75% 1RM | 90-120 s |
| Upper-chest focus | 5 × 6 + 2 × 12 burnout | 75% then 60% | 2 min / 60 s |
Add the incline barbell bench press to your ZON program
Track load, distance and progression in one timeline.




