The Complete Push-Up Guide

Push-ups are a foundational, scalable upper-body exercise that develop chest, shoulders, triceps, and core. Start with regressions (wall / incline / knee) → progress by lowering angle and increasing load or difficulty (decline, weighted, unilateral). Use 3–5 sets; choose rep ranges to match your goal (strength 1–5, hypertrophy 6–12, endurance 13+). Warm up well, control tempo, and progress conservatively.


1) What a Push-Up Is

  • Basic mechanics: Closed-chain horizontal pressing: the hands press the body away from the ground while the feet stay fixed. Key joints: shoulder (glenohumeral), elbow, scapulothoracic complex, and lumbar spine stabilization.
  • Primary muscles: Pectoralis major, anterior deltoid, triceps brachii.
  • Secondary/stabilisers: Serratus anterior, lower & mid trapezius (scapular control), rotator cuff, and a heavy core demand (rectus abdominis, obliques, erectors). EMG studies show push-ups recruit the same prime movers as bench press, and advanced variations (suspension/TRX) can increase activation in pecs/deltoids/triceps.

2) Why Push-Ups Work & Benefits

  • Functional strength & transfer: trains pushing mechanics used in real life.
  • Scalable & low-cost: many regressions/progressions; no gym required.
  • Core & stability carryover: maintaining a rigid plank position strengthens the anti-extension system.
  • Hypertrophy & endurance potential: with appropriate sets/reps/tempo you can target muscle growth or muscular endurance. (Hypertrophy: ~6–12 reps; endurance: 15+ reps or higher volume).

3) How to Start — Warm-up & Movement Prep

General warm-up (5–8 min): light cardio (row/bike) + dynamic mobility (arm circles, thoracic rotations, band pull-aparts).
Movement prep (3–5 min):

  • Scapular push-ups (2 × 8–10) — teach scapular control.
  • Incline incline wall or counter push-ups (1–2 sets) — groove pattern.
    Ramp sets: for stronger trainees doing weighted/decline push-ups: 1–3 warm sets gradually approaching working intensity.
    Rest between working sets: compounds/main variations: 90–180s if heavy/low rep; accessory/higher rep sets: 45–90s.

4) Push-Up Form Checklist (Do These Every Rep)

  • Hand placement: slightly outside shoulder width for standard push-up.
  • Spine: neutral lumbar curve — avoid sagging hips or excessive posterior tilt. Brace core (pull navel toward spine).
  • Scapula: retract slightly on top; control protraction at the top. Avoid shrugging shoulders.
  • Elbow path: ~45° off body for balance of pec & triceps; narrow (close-grip) shifts load to triceps.
  • Range: chest to ~2–3 inches from ground (or full touch if mobility allows), then full extension (don’t lock aggressively).
  • Keep breathing steady — exhale on pushing phase.

5) Programming Principles (Sets / Reps / Tempo)

  • Goal-based rep ranges:
    • Strength: 1–5 reps (use weighted or decline / elevated feet variations).
    • Hypertrophy: 6–12 reps (most balance for size).
    • Endurance: 13+ reps or high-volume circuits.
  • Sets: 3–5 working sets per exercise is common for most goals.
  • Progression approaches: double progression (increase reps then load), tempo manipulation (slow eccentrics 2–4s), or partial to full range work.

6) Regressions → Progressions Table

Use the column “How it changes load / difficulty” as your main progression cue (lower the angle or add load to progress).

Level / VariationHow to do itHow it changes load / difficultySuggested Sets × Reps / Tempo
Beginner
Wall Pushup
Standing arm’s length; press from wallvery low % bodyweight3×10–20, tempo 2:0:1
Beginner → Novice
Incline Pushup(higher)
Hands on bench/rail; lower body angle~20–40% bodyweight3×8–15
Novice
Knee Pushup
Knees on ground, hips neutral~50% bodyweight3×8–12
Novice → Foundation
Standard Pushup
Full plank push-up~60–70% BW (depends on height)3–5×6–15, tempo 2:0:1
Intermediate
Decline Pushup
Feet elevated on benchincreases shoulder & pec load3–5×6–12
Intermediate
Archer Pushup
Wide hand, shift weight side-to-sidebuilds unilateral strength3–5×4–8 each side
Intermediate → Advanced
Suspension / TRX Pushup
Hands in straps; more instabilityhigher EMG activation & core3–5×6–12
Advanced
Weighted Vest Pushup / Plate on back
Add external loaddirect overload for strength & hypertrophy4×4–8 (strength) / 3×8–12 (hypertrophy)
Advanced
Clap / Plyometric Pushup
Explosive concentric, clappower & fast-twitch recruitment3–5×3–8
Advanced
One-Arm Pushup
Feet wide, one armmaximal unilateral demand, core & stability3–5×3–6 each side
Elite
Planche Lean / Pushup
Hands rotated, body parallel; extremevery high shoulder & core demandskill practice, progressions

Notes: EMG research shows suspension push-ups increase muscle activation vs traditional push-ups — a useful tool for advanced overload and instability training.


7) How to Perform Different Variations

Wall & Incline Push-ups (Regressions)

  • Cues: tall plank line from head → knees/heels; scapular pack before press; drive chest away, not just elbows.
  • Progression: lower the surface gradually (wall → counter → bench → low box → floor).

Knee Push-up → Standard Push-up

  • Cues: keep scapular control; avoid sagging hips; retract shoulder blades slightly at top to stabilize scapula.
  • Progression trigger: when able to do 3×12 with strict form, try partial full-range sets (eccentric full push-ups: lower slowly to floor then push back up from knees), then full standard push-ups.

Decline Push-up

  • Feet elevated on box/bench 12–18 inches. Increases shoulder anterior deltoid involvement. Use when standard push-ups are too easy.

Archer & Typewriter

  • Archer: wide hands; shift toward one side per rep; build unilateral control.
  • Typewriter: descend centrally, then shift weight left→right at bottom — great for horizontal pulling/pushing balance.

Suspension / TRX / Rings

  • Use for higher muscle activation and core recruitment; good intermediate modal progression before weighted/one-arm work. EMG shows greater activation on TRX suspension push-ups.

Weighted / Plyometric / One-Arm

  • Weighted: start small — micro increments are critical. Use vest or plate placed safely on upper back (spotter).
  • Plyometric: include only after technique and baseline strength is sound (e.g., 3 sets of 10 standard push-ups).
  • One-arm: use progressions (wide feet, incline one-arm, archer → negative one-arm → full). Resist attempting full one-arm without prep.
plyometric (explosive) pushups movement pattern and muscles worked

8) Sample Bodyweight Workouts (No Equipment Required)

A. Beginner Push-Up Workout (2–3x per week)

Purpose: Build foundational strength, perfect technique, protect shoulders & wrists.
Instructions: Rest 60–90 seconds between sets.

  1. Wall Push-Ups – 3×12–20
  2. Incline Push-Ups (stairs, table, countertop) – 3×8–12
  3. Knee Push-Ups – 2×10–15
  4. Dead-Stop Push-Ups (chest on floor, reset each rep) – 2×6–10
  5. Plank Hold – 2×30–40 sec
  6. Scapular Push-Ups – 2×10–15

Progression Rule: Once you can hit 12–15 reps on incline push-ups with good form, move to full push-ups.


B. Intermediate Push-Up Workout (2–4x per week)

Purpose: Build full-body tension, higher strength endurance, and stability.
Rest: 60–90 seconds.

  1. Standard Push-Ups – 3×10–20
  2. Close-Grip (Diamond-Style) Push-Ups – 3×8–15
  3. Decline Push-Ups (feet on step/chair) – 3×8–12
  4. Wide Push-Ups – 2×10–15
  5. Pseudo-Planche Lean Push-Ups – 2×5–10
  6. Hollow-Body Hold – 2×20–30 sec

Progression Rule: When you can do 20+ strict standard push-ups and 12+ decline push-ups, begin practicing advanced variations.


C. Advanced Push-Up Workout (2–4x per week)

Purpose: Increase power, unilateral control, and ring-level pressing strength — still 100% bodyweight.
Rest: 90–120 seconds.

  1. Archer Push-Ups – 3×6–10 (each side)
  2. Explosive Push-Ups (clap optional) – 3×5–10
  3. Typewriter Push-Ups – 2×6–10
  4. Plyometric Decline Push-Ups – 2×5–8
  5. Pike Push-Ups – 3×6–12
  6. One-Arm Push-Up Progressions:
    • Elevated One-Arm Push-Ups – 2×4–8
    • Assisted (feet wide) – 2×3–5

Progression Rule: Move to full one-arm push-ups only when you control all progressions with clean form.


D. Mobility & Prehab Routine (Optional but Recommended)

Perform 3–5 minutes before or after any workout.

  • Wrist circles – 30 sec each direction
  • Shoulder pass-throughs (towel) – 10–15
  • Cat-cow spine mobility – 10 reps
  • Chest doorway stretch – 20–30 sec
  • Scapular wall slides – 10–15

This greatly reduces shoulder strain and supports long-term progress.

Shoulder pass-throughs with stick

9) Tempo & TUT (Time Under Tension)

  • For hypertrophy, emphasize controlled eccentrics (2–4s down), 0–1 s pause at bottom, explosive concentric.
  • For strength/power, reduce eccentric time, increase concentric velocity (plyo, push off).
  • Total TUT per set matters: longer TUT = more metabolic stress → hypertrophy when combined with appropriate volume.

10) Common Mistakes & Fixes

  • Hips sagging / butt too high → cue “brace core / squeeze glutes”; practice planks.
  • Shoulder shrug / shrugged neck → focus on scapular packing and face pulls for rear delts.
  • Flaring elbows → shoulder pain → tuck elbows to ~45°.
  • Chest not descending fully → mobility work for thoracic spine / pec tightness; use eccentric negatives to develop range.
  • Progressing too fast (adding weighted too soon) → use double progression and micro-loading.

11) Equipment Choices & When to Use Them

  • Push-up bars / parallettes: increase ROM (deeper stretch) and wrist comfort.
  • TRX / Rings: instability + scapular control → great intermediate tool.
  • Weighted vest / plates: direct overload, ideal for advanced trainees. Ensure safe loading and build from sets of bodyweight first.

12) Example of 8-Week Progression (Beginner → Standard Push-Up)

Weeks 1–2 (Foundation)

  • 3× weekly: Incline push-ups 3×10; focus on scapular pack + core.

Weeks 3–4 (Strengthen)

  • Lower incline; 3×8–12. Add eccentric negatives: 2×3 slow full-range negatives.

Weeks 5–6 (Transition)

  • Attempt standard push-up: negative + half rep → then standard sets as able (work to 3×5–8).

Weeks 7–8 (Consolidate)

  • Standard push-ups 3–4×8–12. If consistent, start decline or weighted micro-progressions.

13) Injury Prevention & Rehab Notes

  • Shoulder pain: check scapular control, include band pull-aparts, face pulls, rotator cuff work; avoid pain-provoking ranges.
  • Wrist pain: use push-up bars, fists, or elevate hands on parallettes. Gradually strengthen wrists with isometric holds.
  • Return from injury: start with wall/incline regressions, progress only with pain-free movement and good ROM. Consult a physio for persistent joint pain.

14) Practical Sources and key references

  • Suspension push-up increases activation vs traditional push-up (EMG) — Snarr et al. (2013). National Library of Medicine
  • Rep/sets and hypertrophy recommendations (8–12 best for growth, 15+ for endurance). Schoenfeld review and consensus (2021). National Library of Medicine
  • Practical push-up progressions and beginner planuments — NerdFitness push-up progression. Nerd Fitness
  • Form and technical cues — NASM push-up guide. NASM Blog
  • General push-up guides & variations summary — Gymshark / Les Mills / fitness press summaries. Gymshark

15) My Thoughts

  • Push-ups are under-utilized as a full-body tool: when progressed correctly they train pressing, scapular control, core, and even posterior chain stability indirectly.
  • I prefer graded progressions and double progression (reps → load) over “max reps daily” challenges for sustained results.
  • For hypertrophy: mix standard & incline/decline work and manage total weekly volume (target 9–20 sets per muscle group/week depending on experience). For strength/power: add weighted sets and plyometric practice.
  • Use TRX/suspension as a bridge for instability & activation before one-arm or heavy weighted work; the EMG data supports increased activation but instability must be balanced with strength.
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