EZ-Bar Standing Front Raise

EZ-Bar Standing Front Raise: Proper Form, Sets, Tips & FAQ

EZ-Bar Standing Front Raise: Proper Form, Sets, Tips & FAQ
Shoulders

EZ-Bar Standing Front Raise

Beginner to Intermediate EZ Curl Bar Shoulder Isolation / Hypertrophy
The EZ-Bar Standing Front Raise is a controlled shoulder isolation exercise that targets the anterior deltoids through shoulder flexion. Using an EZ curl bar can make the grip feel more natural than a straight bar for some lifters, while still allowing stable, even loading with both arms. The goal is to raise the bar in front of the body to about shoulder height without swinging, leaning back, or turning the exercise into a full-body heave. Think: smooth lift, quiet torso, controlled lowering.

This movement works best with moderate loads, precise control, and a deliberate tempo. You should feel the front delts doing most of the work while the core and upper body stay braced and stable. Because the resistance arm is longest at the top, even relatively light weight can feel challenging when performed correctly.

Safety tip: Avoid jerking the weight upward or leaning back aggressively to finish the rep. If you feel sharp shoulder pain, pinching at the front of the joint, or lower-back strain, reduce the load, shorten the range slightly, and clean up the tempo.

Quick Overview

Body Part Front Shoulders
Primary Muscle Anterior deltoids
Secondary Muscle Upper chest, serratus anterior, upper traps (stabilizing), core
Equipment EZ curl bar, optional weight plates and collars
Difficulty Beginner to Intermediate

Sets & Reps (By Goal)

  • Muscle growth: 3–4 sets × 8–15 reps, 60–90 sec rest
  • Shoulder accessory work: 2–4 sets × 10–15 reps, controlled tempo, 45–75 sec rest
  • Technique / mind-muscle focus: 2–3 sets × 12–15 reps with lighter weight and 2–3 sec lowering
  • Warm-up activation: 1–2 light sets × 10–12 reps before pressing workouts

Progression rule: Increase reps first, then add small amounts of load. If your torso starts swinging, your load is probably ahead of your control.

Setup / Starting Position

  1. Stand tall: Place your feet around hip- to shoulder-width apart and soften the knees slightly.
  2. Grip the EZ bar evenly: Hold the bar with both hands using a comfortable overhand grip on the angled sections.
  3. Start with the bar in front of the thighs: Let the bar hang under control with arms extended and elbows slightly unlocked.
  4. Brace your trunk: Keep the ribs down, glutes lightly engaged, and abs tight so you do not lean back during the raise.
  5. Set the shoulders: Keep the shoulders down and relaxed rather than shrugged up toward the ears.

Tip: A narrower or more comfortable hand position on the angled sections often makes the EZ bar feel better on the wrists than a straight bar.

Execution (Step-by-Step)

  1. Lift the bar forward: Raise the EZ bar in front of your body in a smooth arc using the front delts.
  2. Keep the elbows softly bent: Maintain the same slight elbow bend throughout the rep instead of turning it into a curl.
  3. Stop around shoulder height: Bring the bar to about parallel with the floor or slightly below, depending on comfort and control.
  4. Pause briefly: Hold the top position for a moment without shrugging or swinging.
  5. Lower under control: Bring the bar back to the thighs slowly, resisting gravity the whole way down.
  6. Repeat smoothly: Reset your posture between reps and keep every repetition clean and deliberate.
Form checkpoint: If your chest pops up, lower back arches hard, or the bar flies upward with momentum, reduce the weight and slow the rep down. The best front raises look strict, not explosive.

Pro Tips & Common Mistakes

  • Raise only as high as you can control: Shoulder height is enough for most lifters.
  • Don’t swing from the hips: Momentum shifts stress away from the target muscle and usually irritates the lower back.
  • Keep the wrists neutral: Don’t excessively bend them back at the top.
  • Use a slow lowering phase: A 2–3 second eccentric makes lighter loads much more effective.
  • Don’t overload too early: Front raises punish sloppy loading quickly because the lever gets hardest near the top.
  • Avoid shrugging: Keep the traps from taking over by staying long through the neck.
  • Use this after big compounds: It fits well after overhead presses, machine shoulder presses, or upper-body push work.

FAQ

What muscles does the EZ-Bar Standing Front Raise work?

It primarily targets the anterior deltoids. The upper chest, serratus anterior, traps, and core also contribute as stabilizers, but the front delts should be doing most of the lifting.

Why use an EZ bar instead of dumbbells or a straight bar?

Many lifters find the angled grip of an EZ bar more comfortable on the wrists and elbows than a straight bar. It also lets both arms move the load together, which can help with rhythm and control.

How high should I raise the bar?

In most cases, raising the bar to about shoulder height is enough. Going much higher often shifts tension, encourages shrugging, and makes it easier to lose clean mechanics.

Is the EZ-Bar Standing Front Raise good for beginners?

Yes, as long as the load stays light enough to keep the torso still. Beginners should focus on strict reps, smooth tempo, and clean shoulder motion before trying to add more weight.

Where should I place this exercise in my workout?

It usually works best as an accessory exercise after compound pressing movements. You can also use it during a shoulder-focused hypertrophy session when you want extra front-delt work.

Disclaimer: This content is for educational and informational purposes only and is not medical advice. Stop if an exercise causes sharp pain and seek qualified guidance if shoulder symptoms persist.