Exercise Database
chest Exercises
Use these chest exercises to build stronger pressing patterns, fuller pec development, and smarter upper-body programming.
Equipment
dumbbell bench press
machine seated fly
machine chest press
cable incline fly
cable lying fly
cable low chest fly
barbell bench press
barbell incline bench press
machine incline chest press
cable standing fly
clap push up
machine high incline hammer chest press
weighted triceps dips
barbell paused incline bench press
dumbbell fly
cable standing crossovers
dumbbell pull over
barbell paused bench press
dips on chair
chest tap push up
decline push up
pike push-up
barbell incline close grip bench press
dips between chair
resistance band push up
machine seated dip
wide grip push-up
bench dip
barbell paused decline bench press
chest dips
bench dip on floor
push up
dumbbell close grip bench press
push-up row
cable lying pullover
cable bench press
machine decline chest press
cable incline bench press
barbell close grip bench press
assisted chest dip
smit-machine incline bench press
burpee
barbell decline bench press
assault bike run
smit-machine bench press
dumbbell incline fly
smit-machine close grip bench press
floor triceps dips
dumbbell incline bench press
incline push-up
diamond push up
Overview
What to know before you pick a chest exercise
Chest training is usually built around pressing, but a good chest library also includes fly patterns, angle changes, and stable machine options that make it easier to keep tension where you want it.
This page helps when you want to choose between flat, incline, decline, machine, cable, and bodyweight variations without guessing which setup best matches your goal.
Selection Guide
How to choose the right option from this collection
Use barbell or machine presses for output
These options are usually easiest to overload when the goal is pressing strength or broad chest mass.
Use dumbbells and cables for freedom
They can feel better on the shoulders and make it easier to find a natural pressing or fly path.
Change the angle with intent
Incline, flat, and decline variations all change emphasis slightly, so pick the setup that best fills the gap in your current program.
Programming Notes
How to program chest work without guesswork
Lead with the main press
Start with the movement that matters most, then add one or two secondary chest patterns that let you train hard with less whole-body demand.
Control the bottom position
The best chest sets usually come from owning the stretch rather than bouncing out of the deepest part of the rep.
Finish with direct tension
Cable or machine work is useful late in the workout because you can keep training the chest when stability is no longer your strength.
Mistakes
Common chest training mistakes
- •Letting shoulder discomfort dictate every rep path instead of choosing a better variation.
- •Turning fly work into a bent-arm press.
- •Pressing with no pause or control at the bottom of the rep.
FAQ
Questions people ask about chest exercises
How many chest exercises do you need in a workout?
One main press plus one or two supporting movements is enough for many lifters, especially if the weekly volume is already appropriate.
Are push-ups enough for chest training?
They can be enough for beginners or high-rep work, but most people eventually need more load or leverage progression to keep growing.
Should chest day include shoulders and triceps?
That is a common and practical split because pressing already overlaps with both muscle groups.
What is better for chest growth, dumbbells or barbells?
Neither is automatically better. Barbells usually make overload simpler, while dumbbells often give a more natural path and extra range for some lifters.