Supported Leaning Single-Arm Kettlebell Front Raise: Form, Sets, Tips & FAQ
Learn the Supported Leaning Single-Arm Kettlebell Front Raise for front delt growth, shoulder control, and strict raising mechanics. Includes form cues, sets by goal, mistakes, FAQ, and recommended equipment.
Supported Leaning Single-Arm Kettlebell Front Raise
This variation works best when the body stays braced and the kettlebell travels in a smooth forward arc. The support hand helps lock in balance so the working side can focus on clean front-delt effort rather than fighting unnecessary body sway. You should feel the front of the shoulder doing most of the work, with the core and grip assisting to stabilize the position. Keep the rep controlled, avoid shrugging, and stop the lift around chest-to-shoulder height unless your mechanics stay perfect.
Quick Overview
| Body Part | Shoulders |
|---|---|
| Primary Muscle | Anterior deltoid (front deltoid) |
| Secondary Muscle | Upper chest, serratus anterior, core stabilizers, forearms, rotator cuff stabilizers |
| Equipment | Kettlebell and a stable support point such as a rack, upright, or post |
| Difficulty | Beginner to Intermediate |
Sets & Reps (By Goal)
- Muscle growth: 3–4 sets × 8–15 reps per arm with 45–75 seconds rest
- Shoulder control and quality reps: 2–4 sets × 6–10 reps per arm with a slower lowering phase
- Light accessory work after presses: 2–3 sets × 10–15 reps per arm using strict form
- End-of-workout delt burn: 2–3 sets × 12–20 reps per arm with lighter weight and no swinging
Progression rule: First improve control, then add reps, then increase kettlebell load. If your torso starts helping the raise, the weight is too heavy for this variation.
Setup / Starting Position
- Stand beside a stable support: Use your non-working hand to hold a rack, upright, or post at a comfortable height.
- Take a balanced stance: Keep feet about hip-width apart or slightly staggered for better stability.
- Lean back slightly: Create a small backward angle while keeping your ribs down and core braced.
- Hold the kettlebell in one hand: Let the working arm hang down naturally with a soft bend in the elbow.
- Set the shoulder: Keep the shoulder packed and relaxed—do not start with a shrug.
Tip: The support hand is there for balance and positioning, not for pulling yourself through the rep.
Execution (Step-by-Step)
- Brace before you move: Tighten your abs, keep the chest quiet, and maintain your slight lean.
- Raise the kettlebell forward: Lift with the front deltoid, bringing the bell up in front of the body in a smooth arc.
- Keep the elbow angle consistent: A slight bend is fine, but do not curl the weight up with the arm.
- Stop around chest or shoulder height: Lift only as high as you can without shrugging or losing control.
- Pause briefly: Hold the top for a moment to eliminate momentum and own the position.
- Lower slowly: Bring the kettlebell back down under control until the arm returns to the starting position.
- Repeat on one side, then switch: Keep each rep consistent instead of chasing a higher range every time.
Pro Tips & Common Mistakes
- Lead with the shoulder, not the hand: Think about lifting from the front delt rather than just moving the kettlebell.
- Use the lean wisely: A small backward lean helps tension; too much turns the exercise sloppy.
- Control the eccentric: The lowering phase is where a lot of muscle-building value happens.
- Don’t shrug the trap: Keep the neck long and the shoulder away from the ear.
- Don’t swing from the hips: This is not a kettlebell swing or power raise.
- Keep reps even side to side: Match quality, tempo, and range on both arms.
- Use moderate loads: Front raises reward precision more than ego lifting.
FAQ
What does this exercise mainly work?
The main target is the anterior deltoid, which is the front portion of the shoulder. The core, grip, and smaller shoulder stabilizers assist throughout the rep.
Why use a support hand in this front raise?
The support hand improves balance and helps reduce body sway, making it easier to keep the lift strict and place more tension on the working shoulder.
How high should I raise the kettlebell?
Most lifters should stop around chest to shoulder height. Going higher is not necessary if it causes shrugging, back extension, or a loss of shoulder position.
Can beginners do this exercise?
Yes. It can be beginner-friendly as long as the kettlebell is light enough and the movement stays slow, controlled, and pain-free.
Should I use this before or after pressing exercises?
It is most often used after compound pressing as an isolation accessory, but lighter sets can also work in a warm-up if your goal is to groove shoulder control.
Recommended Equipment
- Adjustable Kettlebell — ideal for progressive overload without needing multiple bells
- Competition-Style Kettlebell — consistent handle shape and balance for smoother shoulder work
- Resistance Loop Bands — useful for warm-ups, shoulder activation, and supplemental delt work
- Weightlifting Wrist Wraps — helpful if wrist positioning gets uncomfortable during single-arm raises
- Extra-Thick Exercise Mat — useful for home training space, accessory work, and general joint comfort
Tip: Choose tools that improve setup quality and control. For this exercise, technique matters more than using the heaviest kettlebell possible.