Dumbbell Rear Fly

Dumbbell Rear Fly : Form, Muscles Worked, Sets, Tips & FAQ

Dumbbell Rear Fly (Female): Form, Muscles Worked, Sets, Tips & FAQ
Rear Delts / Shoulders

Dumbbell Rear Fly

Beginner to Intermediate Dumbbells + Bench Rear Delt Isolation
The Dumbbell Rear Fly is a classic shoulder isolation exercise that targets the rear deltoids while also training the upper back stabilizers. Performed with a chest-over-thighs torso angle and a controlled outward arm path, this movement helps improve rear shoulder development, posture balance, and overall shoulder symmetry. The goal is to raise the arms out to the sides with control—not to swing the weights or turn the movement into a row.

This exercise works best with moderate loads, a strict tempo, and a clear focus on moving through the shoulder joint. You should feel the rear delts working at the top of each rep, along with light support from the rhomboids and mid traps. If you need momentum to lift the dumbbells, the weight is likely too heavy.

Safety tip: Keep your spine neutral, avoid jerking the weights upward, and stop if you feel sharp shoulder pain, pinching at the front of the joint, or lower-back strain from poor torso positioning.

Quick Overview

Body Part Rear Shoulders
Primary Muscle Rear deltoids (posterior deltoids)
Secondary Muscle Rhomboids, middle trapezius, rotator cuff stabilizers
Equipment Dumbbells and a flat bench
Difficulty Beginner to Intermediate

Sets & Reps (By Goal)

  • Muscle growth: 3–4 sets × 10–15 reps with 45–75 sec rest
  • Technique and control: 2–3 sets × 12–15 reps using lighter dumbbells and a slower tempo
  • Shoulder accessory work: 2–4 sets × 12–20 reps after presses, rows, or pull workouts
  • Posture-focused training: 2–3 sets × 15–20 reps with strict form and moderate control

Progression rule: Add reps before adding weight. Rear delt work responds well to precision, smooth eccentrics, and clean top-end contraction.

Setup / Starting Position

  1. Sit on a flat bench: Hold a dumbbell in each hand and place your feet firmly on the floor.
  2. Hinge forward: Lean your torso over your thighs so your chest is angled toward the floor.
  3. Let the arms hang naturally: Position the dumbbells below your shoulders with palms facing each other.
  4. Maintain a soft elbow bend: Keep a slight bend in the elbows throughout the set.
  5. Brace your torso: Keep the core engaged, neck neutral, and shoulders down away from the ears.

Tip: Set the torso angle first. If your chest is too upright, the movement shifts away from the rear delts.

Execution (Step-by-Step)

  1. Start from the bottom: Let the dumbbells hang under the shoulders with full control and a neutral grip.
  2. Raise the arms outward: Lift both arms to the sides in a wide arc, keeping the elbows slightly bent.
  3. Lead with the elbows: Think about moving the upper arms out and slightly back rather than pulling the hands upward.
  4. Pause near shoulder height: Stop when the upper arms are roughly in line with the shoulders and squeeze the rear delts.
  5. Lower slowly: Bring the dumbbells back down under control without dropping them or swinging into the next rep.
Form checkpoint: If the movement starts to look like a row, your elbows travel too far backward, or your traps take over, lower the weight and focus on a cleaner sideward fly path.

Pro Tips & Common Mistakes

  • Use lighter dumbbells than expected: Rear delts are smaller muscles and usually respond better to clean reps than heavy loading.
  • Keep the torso stable: Avoid rocking the body or using momentum to lift the weights.
  • Do not shrug: Elevating the shoulders shifts tension into the upper traps.
  • Avoid turning it into a row: The arms should move out wide, not pull straight back along the ribs.
  • Control the eccentric: Lowering slowly improves rear delt tension and reduces sloppy reps.
  • Keep the neck neutral: Do not crane the head up while bent over on the bench.
  • Stop at a strong contraction: You do not need to force excessive height if it compromises shoulder position.

FAQ

What muscles does the dumbbell rear fly work?

The primary target is the rear deltoid. Secondary support comes from the rhomboids, middle traps, and smaller shoulder stabilizers.

Should the dumbbell rear fly be heavy or light?

Most lifters get better results using a light to moderate load with strict form. Heavy weights often turn the exercise into a row or cause excessive shrugging.

Why do I feel this more in my traps than my rear delts?

That usually happens when you shrug the shoulders, go too heavy, or pull the elbows too far backward. Lower the weight and focus on lifting out to the sides with the shoulders kept down.

Can beginners do dumbbell rear flies?

Yes. Beginners can perform this exercise safely with light dumbbells and a controlled tempo. Start with smaller ranges and prioritize technique before increasing load.

Is this exercise good for posture?

It can help support better posture by strengthening the rear shoulders and upper back, especially when combined with rowing movements and chest mobility work.

Training disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Train within your limits, use controlled technique, and consult a qualified professional if you have shoulder pain or injury history.