Front Plate Raise
The front plate raise targets the anterior deltoids using a weight plate held in front of the body. The fixed grip and long lever arm keep tension constant, making it a strict isolation movement for stronger front shoulders and better pressing stability.
Muscles Worked
Primary Muscles
- Anterior Deltoids (Front Shoulders)
Secondary Muscles
- Upper Chest
- Serratus Anterior
- Core Stabilizers
How to Perform
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1
Setup: Grab a plate with both hands at 3 and 9 o’clock. Stand tall with chest up and core braced.
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2
Starting Position: Hold the plate at or just below hip level. Keep a slight bend in your elbows, neutral spine, and ribs down.
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3
Raise: Lift the plate forward in a smooth arc to shoulder height, keeping elbows fixed and movement controlled.
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4
Peak Position: Pause briefly at shoulder height and squeeze the front delts without leaning back.
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5
Lower: Control the plate down over 2–3 seconds. Stop just short of your thighs to keep tension.
Common Mistakes
Using Momentum and Swinging
Rocking your torso or using leg drive defeats the purpose. Keep the movement strict and controlled.
Raising Too High
Going above shoulder height shifts tension to traps and increases impingement risk.
Leaning Back
Arching your back recruits chest and reduces delt tension. Stay upright and braced.
Using Too Heavy Weight
Heavy plates force compensation. Start light and nail perfect form.
Training Notes
Front Plate Raise is safest when the ribs stay down and the shoulder blades glide naturally. Avoid excessive arching by tightening the glutes and keeping the pelvis stacked. A neutral wrist and elbows slightly in front of the body keep the press in a strong, shoulder‑friendly line.
Use a controlled lowering phase to build stability. A 2–3 second eccentric helps the delts do the work rather than the traps. If you feel pinching, reduce range slightly and keep the elbows from drifting too far behind the body.
For hypertrophy, aim for 3–4 sets of 8–15 reps, leaving 1–2 reps in reserve. For strength, keep reps lower (5–8) and focus on crisp technique. Rest 90–150 seconds for moderate loads; longer for heavier sets.
If the traps take over, lower the load and think about “shoulders down and wide.” A slightly wider grip can reduce internal rotation stress during upright‑row type patterns. For raises, stop at shoulder height to avoid unnecessary joint strain.
Pair Front Plate Raise with a rear‑delt or external‑rotation movement to balance the shoulder. A simple combo is a press plus face pulls or rear‑delt flyes. Over time, track reps and load while keeping the same smooth tempo.
Warm up with 1–2 lighter sets and some shoulder mobility before heavy work. Small adjustments—seat height, grip width, or range—can make a big difference in comfort and deltoid activation.
A slight scapular‑plane angle (about 30° forward of the body) is usually the most shoulder‑friendly for presses and raises. If your joint feels irritated, reduce range and keep the elbows slightly forward.
For lateral raises, think “long arms and soft elbows,” and stop when the hands reach shoulder height. Heavier weights tend to shift the work to the traps, so keep the load moderate and focus on tempo.
Balance your week with at least one rear‑delt movement and some external rotation work. This keeps the shoulder joint centered and reduces the risk of impingement over time.
Progression can be as simple as adding one rep per set or one extra set at the end. Keep the technique identical, and the delts will respond without needing to chase heavy loads.
Programming & Progression
Keep weekly shoulder volume balanced: presses, lateral raises, and rear‑delt work should each show up at least once. Many lifters benefit from 10–16 quality sets per week per deltoid head, adjusted for recovery and pressing volume.
Pro Tips
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Grip at 3 and 9 O'Clock
Holding the plate on the sides improves control and keeps wrists neutral.
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Stop Short of Thighs
Don’t rest the plate on your legs at the bottom—keep tension throughout.
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Use Light Weight
The long lever arm makes even light plates challenging. Quality beats load.
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Slow Eccentric
Take 2-3 seconds to lower for more time under tension.
Track Your Front Plate Raise Progress
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