Floor Press Mistakes to Avoid
Not pausing on the floor — the dead stop is the point. Bouncing your arms off the floor is cheating and risks elbow injury.
Flaring elbows wide — with no bench to support your shoulders, flared elbows strain the joint more. Tuck to 45°.
Bridging hips off the floor — keep your butt and upper back on the ground. Don't turn it into a hip thrust press.
Using the same weight as bench press — the floor press is typically 85-90% of bench. Adjust expectations.
Floor Press Muscles Worked
The floor press targets the chest and triceps roughly equally due to the reduced range of motion. The dead-stop from the floor eliminates the stretch reflex, making the triceps work harder to initiate each rep. The front deltoids assist.
Floor Press FAQ
Why do floor press instead of bench press?
Three reasons: to improve lockout strength (the top half of bench press), to train pressing with shoulder issues (the reduced ROM is easier on the shoulder), or because you don't have a bench.
Is floor press good for chest?
It works the chest but emphasizes the triceps more than bench press due to the limited range. If chest is your priority, bench press is better. Floor press is a tricep-dominant pressing accessory.
Should I do floor press with dumbbells or barbell?
Both work. Barbell allows heavier loads. Dumbbells give independent arm work and a slightly different path. Barbell is more common for the floor press specifically.
How much can I floor press compared to bench press?
Most people floor press 85-95% of their bench press. The reduced ROM removes some chest contribution, which is why it's slightly less despite looking easier.