Lever Incline Shoulder Raise

The Lever Incline Shoulder Raise primarily works the Serratus Anterior, with secondary activation of the Pectoralis Major (Clavicular) and stabilizer support from the Anterior Deltoid, Brachialis, Triceps (Long Head). It is a machine isolation exercise at beginner difficulty.

The Lever Incline Shoulder Raise is an beginner isolation exercise performed with machine, following a isolation movement pattern. It primarily targets the Serratus Anterior, with secondary engagement of the Pectoralis Major (Clavicular). This is a bilateral pushing movement, meaning both sides work together to generate force.

A machine isolation push exercise targeting the Serratus Anterior.

EquipmentMachine
DifficultyBeginner
TypeIsolation
MovementIsolation
ForcePush
LateralityBilateral
PrimarySerratus Anterior
SecondaryPectoralis Major (Clavicular)

Muscles Worked

Front
Back
Primary Secondary Stabilizer

The Serratus Anterior is the primary mover, taking on the bulk of the workload throughout the full range of motion. The Pectoralis Major (Clavicular) assists as a secondary mover, contributing to force production without bearing the primary load. The Anterior Deltoid, Brachialis, Triceps (Long Head) act as stabilizers, maintaining joint position and postural alignment throughout the movement.

Primary Muscles

Secondary Muscles

Stabilizer Muscles

How to Perform

Preparation

  1. Sit on lever chest press machine with shoulders aligned with lever grips.
  2. Grasp lever grips with shoulder width overhand grip.
  3. Push weight up so arms are straight.

Execution

  1. Raise shoulders toward lever grips as far as possible.
  2. Lower shoulders to bench and repeat.

Comments

  1. Keep arms straight throughout execution.
  2. For convenience, exercise can be performed immediately after warm up onLever Incline Chest Press.

Tips & Common Mistakes

Programming Suggestions

Adapt your sets and reps to your training goal. As a beginner-friendly exercise, start with lighter loads and focus on form before progressing weight.

Strength3–4 sets × 6–8 reps at 75–85% 1RM with 90–120 seconds rest.
Hypertrophy3–4 sets × 10–15 reps at 60–75% 1RM with 60–90 seconds rest.
Endurance2–3 sets × 15–25 reps at 40–60% 1RM with 30–45 seconds rest.

Alternative Exercises

These exercises target the same primary muscles (Serratus Anterior) and can be substituted based on your equipment or variation preferences.

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