Best Biceps and Triceps Exercises for Bigger Arms

Building genuinely impressive arms requires more than endless curls - you need balanced biceps and triceps work. Here are the best exercises, a sample workout, and the mistakes keeping your arms small.

Trainera Team
13. april 2026.
8 min čitanja
Best Biceps and Triceps Exercises for Bigger Arms
arm exercisesbiceps workouttriceps exercisesbigger armsstrength traininghypertrophy

Quick answer

The best biceps exercise for growth is the incline dumbbell curl, because it loads the long head in a deep stretch. The best triceps exercise is the overhead extension, which stretches the long head that makes up most of the arm. Prioritise triceps for real size.

  • 1. Overhead triceps extension - best overall move for arm size, stretches the long head.
  • 2. Incline dumbbell curl - best biceps builder, loads the long head under stretch.
  • 3. Close-grip bench press - heavy triceps mass builder across all three heads.
  • 4. Barbell curl - foundational biceps mass and strength.

Why Arm Training Deserves a Strategy

Big arms are probably the single most requested physique goal in the gym, yet most lifters approach them with a random mix of curls and pushdowns that never quite delivers. The truth is the upper arm is made up of two main muscle groups - the biceps on the front and the triceps on the back - and the triceps actually make up roughly two-thirds of the upper arm's total mass. If your arms are lagging, the answer is almost always more and smarter triceps work, not more bicep curls.

This guide breaks down the anatomy, the highest-return exercises, a complete sample workout, and the mistakes that keep most people's arms stuck at the same size year after year.

Understanding the Arm Muscles

The Biceps: More Than One Muscle

The biceps brachii has two heads - a long head on the outside and a short head on the inside. The long head creates the peak on the top of the arm while the short head adds width when viewed from the front. Sitting underneath is the brachialis, a smaller muscle that, when developed, pushes the biceps upward and makes the arm look visibly thicker. The brachioradialis on the forearm also contributes to that full, dense arm look when trained.

The Triceps: Three Heads, Three Angles

The triceps has three heads: the long head (inner, back of the arm), the lateral head (outer, responsible for the horseshoe shape), and the medial head (deep, plays a stabilising role). Complete triceps development needs exercises that hit each head through its full range - no single exercise covers all three optimally.

The Best Biceps Exercises

Barbell Curl

The barbell curl is the foundational mass builder for the biceps. Because you can load it heavier than most variations, it drives total biceps size and strength better than almost anything else. Use a shoulder-width grip, keep your elbows pinned to your sides, and avoid swinging your torso - the movement should come from the elbow, not the hips.

Loading: 3 - 4 sets of 6 - 10 reps as your primary biceps movement.

Incline Dumbbell Curl

Set a bench to 45 - 60 degrees and let your arms hang behind the line of your body. This stretches the long head of the biceps under load, creating one of the strongest hypertrophy stimuli available. If your biceps peak is underdeveloped, incline curls are your best tool.

Loading: 3 sets of 10 - 12 reps.

Hammer Curl

The neutral grip shifts emphasis to the brachialis and brachioradialis - the muscles that push the biceps up from below and thicken the arm. Hammer curls also tend to be easier on cranky elbows than supinated curls, making them a safer high-volume option.

Loading: 3 sets of 10 - 15 reps.

Cable Curl

Unlike dumbbells or barbells, cables keep tension on the biceps throughout the full range of motion, with no rest point at the bottom. This makes cable curls excellent for finishing sets and accumulating high-quality volume.

Loading: 3 sets of 12 - 15 reps.

The Best Triceps Exercises

Close-Grip Bench Press

The close-grip bench press is to triceps what the squat is to legs - the heavy compound movement that drives mass and strength across all three heads. Grip the bar roughly shoulder-width, keep your elbows tucked at about 45 degrees, and press. If your triceps are lagging, program this as your heaviest arm movement of the week.

Loading: 3 - 4 sets of 6 - 8 reps.

Overhead Triceps Extension

Any variation that takes the arm into full shoulder flexion - dumbbell, cable, or rope - stretches the long head of the triceps under load. Research consistently shows this stretched position drives more hypertrophy than movements where the arm stays by the side. If you only picked one triceps isolation exercise, this would be it.

Loading: 3 sets of 10 - 12 reps.

Triceps Pushdown

The pushdown emphasises the lateral head - the horseshoe. Use a rope or V-bar, keep your elbows locked at your sides, and squeeze at the bottom. Resist the urge to lean over the cable and use bodyweight as momentum.

Loading: 3 sets of 12 - 15 reps.

Dips

Lean forward and they hit chest; stay upright and they hammer the triceps. Bodyweight dips scale up to weighted dips as you get stronger, making them one of the best long-term tools for triceps development.

Loading: 3 sets to 1 - 2 reps shy of failure.

Sample Arm Workout

This session alternates biceps and triceps movements to keep each muscle group fresh. Rest 90 seconds between compound sets and 60 seconds between isolation sets.

  • Close-Grip Bench Press - 4 sets × 8 reps
  • Barbell Curl - 4 sets × 8 reps
  • Overhead Rope Triceps Extension - 3 sets × 12 reps
  • Incline Dumbbell Curl - 3 sets × 12 reps
  • Triceps Rope Pushdown - 3 sets × 15 reps
  • Hammer Curl - 3 sets × 15 reps

Roughly 20 working sets total, balanced 50/50 between biceps and triceps. Appropriate for once or twice a week depending on your overall training split. Tracking these sessions in an app like Trainera.fit makes progressive overload obvious - you see exactly what you lifted last time and know whether to add weight or reps.

Common Arm Training Mistakes

Too Much Biceps, Not Enough Triceps

Biceps are the "show" muscle, so they get the attention - but the triceps are the bigger muscle and the real driver of upper arm size. If you want arms that look full from every angle, your triceps volume should match or exceed your biceps volume.

Momentum Over Tension

Swinging heavy weights up on curls feels productive but moves the load away from the biceps and onto your hips and lower back. A strict set with a weight you can control for 10 reps beats an ego-driven set of 6 with twice the body English every time.

Ignoring the Stretched Position

Incline curls for biceps and overhead extensions for triceps load the muscle in its lengthened position - which research has repeatedly shown produces more growth than exercises performed only in the shortened position. Most people's arm routines are missing this stimulus entirely.

Not Training to Near-Failure

Arms are small muscles that recover quickly and need to be pushed hard. If you're stopping your curl sets with 4 - 5 reps left in the tank, you're leaving growth on the table. Take most isolation sets to 1 - 2 reps shy of failure.

Recovery and Frequency

Arms get heavy indirect work from any pressing (triceps) or pulling (biceps) session, so they rarely need a dedicated third day. For most lifters, one focused arm day plus the indirect stimulus from chest, back, and shoulder sessions is enough to drive continuous growth. If arms are a specific weak point, adding a second lower-volume arm session 48 hours later can accelerate progress.

Sleep, protein (1.6 - 2.2g per kg of bodyweight), and overall training consistency matter more than any specific exercise selection. You can't out-curl a bad recovery plan.

Build Arms with a Structured Program

Random curls and pushdowns whenever you feel like it won't build impressive arms. Structured programming - tracking sets, reps, and weights, and progressively increasing load over time - is what separates the people with genuinely big arms from everyone else. If writing your own plan feels like guesswork, Trainera.fit connects you with certified trainers who build personalised programs around your goals, and gives you the workout logger to execute them session after session.

Train both heads of each muscle, stretch them under load, push close to failure, and log every session. Bigger arms are a matter of time.

Wondering which muscle deserves priority? Read biceps or triceps: which makes your arms look bigger.

Related reading

Često postavljana pitanja

How often should I train arms per week?

Most lifters grow well with one dedicated arm day per week, on top of the indirect stimulus biceps and triceps get from pulling and pressing sessions. If arms are a priority or a lagging body part, adding a second lower-volume arm session 48 hours later can accelerate growth.

Which is better for bigger arms - biceps or triceps focus?

Triceps. They make up roughly two-thirds of the upper arm's total muscle mass, so prioritising triceps volume gives you more arm size per unit of effort. Aim for at least equal volume between the two, and lean toward slightly more triceps work if arm size is your main goal.

Are dumbbells or barbells better for biceps?

Both have distinct advantages. Barbells let you load the heaviest total weight, which drives strength and overall mass. Dumbbells, especially on incline curls, give each arm its own range of motion and stretch the long head more effectively. A good program includes both.

Why aren't my arms getting bigger despite training them often?

The most common reasons are lack of progressive overload (lifting the same weights for the same reps for months), under-eating protein, too much volume without enough intensity, or simply not training close enough to failure. Track your sessions, eat enough protein, and push most sets to 1 - 2 reps shy of failure.

What is the best bicep exercise for growth?

The incline dumbbell curl is the strongest single biceps growth exercise. Setting the bench to 45 - 60 degrees lets your arms hang behind your torso, which loads the long head of the biceps in a deep stretch - the position research links to the most hypertrophy. Pair it with a heavy barbell curl for total mass and strength.

How many arm exercises should I do per workout?

Four to six exercises per arm session works well for most lifters: two to three for biceps and two to three for triceps, split roughly 50/50, for around 18 - 22 total working sets. Start with your heaviest compound moves like close-grip bench press and barbell curl, then finish with isolation work such as overhead extensions and incline curls.

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