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Push Day Workout: Chest, Shoulders, and Triceps Routine

Build your chest, shoulders, and triceps with this powerful push day workout routine, perfect for popular 4-day push workout plans and splits.

Some of the most functional movements you do every single day involve the push motion. Closing doors, placing objects overhead, getting off the floor, mowing the lawn — all these, and tons more, require developed, balanced push muscles.

Yet these same muscles can often be neglected, especially for beginners new to strength training or weight lifting, or nervous about trying intimidating new equipment at the gym.

That's where a push day workout comes in. By intentionally training muscles in your chest, shoulders, triceps, and forearms together in a cohesive session, you begin developing strength that's useful for far more than opening up a stubborn pickle jar. You're developing a posture-supporting, performance-enhancing, even confidence-boosting strength habit, one approachable but effective.

55-65 Minute Duration

Upper Body Program

~200-380+ Calories Burned

6 Different Exercises

Recommended 2-3x/Week

Contents

  1. Push Day Workout: Example Routine
    1. Warm-up & Cool-Down
    2. Estimated Calories Burned
    3. Recommended Number of workouts
  2. Muscle Groups Targeted
  3. Equipment Used for Push Day Workout
  4. Coaching Tips & Best Practices
  5. Who This Workout is Best For
  6. Answers to FAQs about Push Day Workout
  7. Concluding words on Push Day Workout

Push Day Workout: Example Routine

Perform this push day workout with 6 exercises total, 3-4 sets per exercise. Rest 60-90 seconds between sets and 2 minutes between each circuit.

Circuit 1

  • Barbell bench press (4 sets of 8-10 reps)
  • Seated dumbbell shoulder press (3 sets of 10-12 reps)
  • Incline dumbbell press (3 sets of 8-10 reps)

Circuit 2

  • Cable chest fly (3 sets of 12-15 reps)
  • Triceps rope pushdown (3 sets of 12-15 reps)
  • Overhead dumbbell triceps extension (3 sets of 8-12 reps)

Warm-up & Cool-Down

A dynamic warm-up, like the one below, can help support shoulder mobility, lubricate the joints, and activates stabilizers around your pressing muscles. Its cool down prevents tightness and helps restore flexibility.

Warm-Up (3.5 minutes)

  • Arm circles (30 sec)
  • Shoulder rolls (30 sec)
  • Push-up to downward dog (1 min)
  • Band pull-aparts (30 sec)
  • Chest openers with torso twist (1 min)

Cool Down (4 minutes)

  • Doorway chest stretch (30 sec)
  • Overhead triceps stretch (1 min)
  • Cross-body shoulder stretch (30 sec each side)
  • Cat-cow mobility stretch (1 min)
  • Child's pose deep breathing (1 min)

Estimated Calories Burned

  • Women 120-150 lbs: 200-250 calories
  • Women 150-180 lbs: 250-310 calories
  • Men 150-180 lbs: 280-340 calories
  • Men 180-220+ lbs: 380+ calories


Remember, these are simply calorie estimates, not guarantees. You can increase your push day's total calories burned by doing things like adding more load to your reps, performing slow eccentric (lowering) phases, or incorporating drop sets for an added challenge, but results will always be individual.

Recommended Number of workouts

For pressing workouts especially, Tonal Coach Joe Rodonis advocates first and foremost to "master the movements" before revving up volume:

  • Beginners can benefit from performing this push day workout 1x/week.
  • More experienced strength trainers practicing a standard 4-day push workout split can include it up to 2x/week, alternating between pull days, leg days, and active recovery.

"Focus on the form of the movement first. This can be done with almost no weight — just the bar — or with bodyweight moves like a push-up.  Work on finding the right form and bar path on the movement." 

Adjust frequency based on your muscle-building goals, recovery needs, and schedule. Consistency is key in strength training. Progress comes from repetition, not rushing.

Muscle Groups Targeted

This push day workout emphasizes a range of pressing muscles, ones powering everyday movements like pushing open doors and windows, moving around household objects, or even stabilizing the rest of your body during strenuous upper-body work.

"Practice full range of motion," says Coach Rodonis. "If you’re shortening the reps, you’re missing on strength improvements. We need to build strength through the entire range of motion."

Strengthening these target muscles properly through fuller ranges of motion also creates upper-body balance and proportion while supporting the joints involved in pressing. All to help you build more dependable upper-body strength.

As these muscles become more capable, they contribute to steadier positioning around the shoulders and can encourage better alignment through everyday movements. This balance also pairs well with the work you do on pull days, creating a more coordinated relationship between the two patterns.

Major muscle groups worked:

  • Chest
  • Shoulders
  • Triceps

Key individual muscles worked:

  • Pectoralis major and minor
  • Anterior and medial deltoids
  • Triceps brachii

Equipment Used for Push Day Workout

This push day workout uses common gym equipment for effective upper-body muscle targeting, but it can easily be adapted for a home setup. Or you can adjust it to be bodyweight-only.

Equipment used:

  • Barbell and dumbbells
  • Cable machine or resistance bands
  • Bench or sturdy elevated surface
  • Tonal trainer system

Alternatives:

  • Use resistance bands in place of cables
  • Perform floor presses instead of bench presses
  • Substitute dumbbells with filled water jugs or weighted backpacks

Optional gear for progressions:

  • Adjustable bench
  • Weighted vest
  • Wrist wraps
  • Resistance chains or bands for added tension

Who This Workout is Most Effective For

Push day workouts are generally used as part of split training. This strategy can be ideal for anyone looking to build upper-body power, definition, and functional strength without neglecting other large muscle groups. As Coach Rodonis likes to remind his clients, "Training is nothing but a repeated cycle of testing our benchmark, finding our weaknesses, and going to work to strengthen them. And repeat."

Push days are especially great for:

  • Beginners learning compound lifts and seeking a core set of exercises to confidently master.
  • Active gym-goers and cross-training athletes following the standardized 4 day push workout split or a hypertrophy focused workout program.
  • Those seeking posture improvement, like desk workers.
  • Those building more shoulder stability after an upper-body injury.

Essentially, if you enjoy more structured training styles to help you progress with your goals, this can be a good workout for you.

Answers to FAQs about Push Day Workout


Five exercises can work perfectly well when they’re chosen with intention. A mix of pressing patterns and supportive accessory movements can create a focused session without feeling overwhelming. What matters most is the quality of the work, not the length of your exercise list.


You can make strength progress with push-focused training, but most people see better overall balance when push, pull, and lower-body movements all have space in their routine.

A push-only approach can be useful for short stretches depending on your schedule, but pairing it with other movement patterns typically supports more well-rounded strength.


Technically speaking, squats fit into the “push” category for most people because the movement asks your legs to press the ground away, mirroring a pressing pattern.

While the pattern is lower-body driven, it shares similarities with upper-body push days in how you generate force through your legs.

It depends! Rest periods often fall somewhere between 60-120+ seconds between sets, depending on the exercise, how heavy the work feels, even what you're trying to get out of the workout.

Shorter rests can keep the session moving, while longer rests may help you maintain steadier form on demanding lifts. The right choice is the one that helps you stay controlled and consistent throughout the workout and fits your fitness goals.

Concluding words on Push Day Workout

Remember, progress happens when you get clear about your workout goals, and then stick with doing them.

"Strong training is balanced training," Coach Rodonis reminds us. "When you overtrain one side and undertrain or neglect the other, it creates an imbalance. This can cause a loss of stability, loss of efficient force transfer, a risk for overuse injuries, and may cause the body to compensate by pulling in other muscles to support — which is not what we want!"

Stay consistent, trust the slow but steady muscle-development process, and enjoy how every push day workout brings you closer to your strongest sense of self.

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