Landmine Press

Landmine Press: Proper Form, Sets, Benefits, Mistakes & FAQ

Landmine Press: Proper Form, Sets, Benefits, Mistakes & FAQ
Shoulders

Landmine Press

Beginner to Intermediate Barbell + Landmine Setup Strength / Stability / Shoulder Development
The Landmine Press is a shoulder-focused pressing exercise that moves the bar on a natural up-and-forward arc, making it a great option for building the front delts, improving upper-body pressing strength, and training core stability with less overhead stress than many traditional presses. Keep the ribs down, brace the midsection, and press the bar smoothly rather than leaning back or forcing range.

The Landmine Press works especially well for lifters who want a shoulder press variation that feels more joint-friendly while still challenging the shoulders, triceps, upper chest, and core. Because the bar travels in a diagonal path instead of straight overhead, many people find it easier to control and more comfortable on the shoulders.

Safety tip: Keep your torso braced and avoid excessive lower-back arching. If you feel sharp shoulder pain, pinching at the front of the joint, or discomfort that worsens rep to rep, reduce the load and check your setup.

Quick Overview

Body Part Shoulders
Primary Muscle Anterior deltoid
Secondary Muscle Lateral deltoid, upper chest, triceps, serratus anterior, core stabilizers
Equipment Barbell, landmine attachment or anchored barbell, weight plates
Difficulty Beginner to Intermediate

Sets & Reps (By Goal)

  • Muscle building: 3–4 sets × 8–12 reps per side
  • Strength focus: 4–5 sets × 4–6 reps per side
  • Shoulder stability and control: 2–4 sets × 8–10 controlled reps per side
  • Warm-up / movement prep: 2–3 sets × 6–8 light reps per side

Progression rule: Increase the load only when you can press through the full intended path without leaning back, shrugging excessively, or losing control at the top.

Setup / Starting Position

  1. Set the bar: Place one end of the barbell into a landmine attachment or secure corner setup.
  2. Choose your stance: Stand in a split stance or stable shoulder-width stance, depending on comfort and balance.
  3. Grip the bar end: Hold the sleeve end with one hand at about shoulder height using a neutral grip.
  4. Stack your posture: Brace the core, keep the ribs down, and maintain a tall chest without flaring the ribcage.
  5. Align the elbow: Keep the elbow slightly in front of the body rather than flared straight out to the side.

Tip: A half-kneeling version is also excellent if you want even more core control and less chance of leaning back.

Execution (Step-by-Step)

  1. Brace before you move: Tighten the midsection and keep your glutes engaged so the torso stays stable.
  2. Press the bar upward and forward: Drive the bar in a smooth arc, following the natural landmine path.
  3. Extend with control: Reach near full arm extension without jamming the shoulder or locking out aggressively.
  4. Pause briefly: Hold the top for a moment while keeping the shoulder packed and the torso steady.
  5. Lower slowly: Bring the bar back down along the same path to the starting position under control.
Form checkpoint: The bar should travel on a diagonal arc. Do not try to turn it into a straight overhead press, and do not lean your chest backward just to finish the rep.

Pro Tips & Common Mistakes

  • Keep the ribs down: Excessive rib flare usually means the lower back is taking over.
  • Press with the shoulder, not momentum: Avoid bouncing from the legs or twisting the torso to move the bar.
  • Stay in the bar path: Let the landmine angle guide the press naturally instead of forcing a vertical line.
  • Do not shrug hard at the top: Keep the neck relaxed and the shoulder controlled.
  • Use a full but pain-free range: Stop short of any position that causes pinching or unstable shoulder mechanics.
  • Train both sides evenly: Match reps and control from left to right to improve balance and symmetry.

FAQ

Is the Landmine Press good for shoulder growth?

Yes. It is an excellent choice for building the front delts while also involving the triceps, upper chest, and stabilizing muscles of the core and shoulder girdle.

Is the Landmine Press safer than a strict overhead press?

For many people, yes. The angled pressing path often feels more shoulder-friendly because it does not force the arm into the same overhead position as a traditional vertical press.

Should I do it standing or half-kneeling?

Both work well. Standing usually allows heavier loading, while half-kneeling tends to improve posture, control, and anti-extension core stability.

Can beginners use the Landmine Press?

Absolutely. It is often easier to learn than many overhead pressing variations because the bar path is guided and the movement can be loaded progressively.

What is the biggest mistake in this exercise?

The most common mistake is leaning back too much and turning the press into a chest-and-low-back driven movement instead of a clean shoulder press.

Training disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Use a load and range of motion appropriate for your current ability and consult a qualified professional if pain persists.