Loading...

Skull Crushers Hurt My Elbows

Mofilo TeamMofilo Team
8 min read

The Real Reason Skull Crushers Hurt Your Elbows

If skull crushers hurt my elbows, it's because you're lowering the bar to the wrong spot-90% of people aim for their forehead when they should be aiming for the space behind their head. That single change can eliminate the sharp, stabbing pain you feel on the tip of your elbow. You've probably tried lowering the weight, switching to an EZ-bar, or just pushing through it, but the pain is still there. It’s frustrating because you see everyone else doing them, and they're supposed to be one of the best triceps builders. The problem isn't your elbows; it's the exercise's name. The name 'skull crusher' encourages a vertical movement pattern that puts an incredible amount of shearing stress directly on your elbow tendon. Your elbow is a simple hinge joint, designed for flexion and extension. When you lower a heavy weight directly towards your forehead, you're forcing the joint to act as a brake at an unnatural angle, straining the triceps tendon where it connects to the olecranon (the bony part of your elbow). The solution is to stop thinking 'skull crusher' and start thinking 'lying triceps extension,' which involves an arc, not a straight line.

Why Your Elbows Are Failing The Stress Test

That sharp pain you feel isn't a sign of weakness; it's a warning signal from a joint pushed past its mechanical limit. Imagine trying to bend a door hinge sideways-it’s not designed for that force, and eventually, it will break. When you perform a traditional skull crusher, you're creating a similar, damaging force on your elbow. The number one mistake that accelerates this damage is letting your elbows flare out. As the weight gets heavy, your elbows drift apart to recruit your lats and shoulders for help. This turns a precision triceps exercise into a sloppy, joint-wrecking press. This elbow flare completely changes the load path, shifting stress from the large triceps muscle belly to the small tendon insertion point. Over time, this repetitive strain leads to tendonitis, which is inflammation and micro-tearing of the tendon. You're accumulating a recovery debt you can't see. Each painful rep digs you deeper into that hole, making recovery longer and more difficult. A properly performed triceps extension should feel the tension deep in the long head of the triceps-the part of the muscle running down the back of your arm. If all you feel is a sharp, pinpoint pain at the elbow, you're not stimulating muscle growth; you're just causing damage.

Mofilo

Tired of guessing? Track it.

Mofilo tracks food, workouts, and your purpose. Download today.

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play
Dashboard
Workout
Food Log

The 3-Step Protocol for Pain-Free Triceps Growth

Feeling that elbow pain is a clear signal to stop. Not to pause, not to lower the weight, but to stop completely. Pushing through joint pain is the fastest way to turn a temporary issue into a chronic injury that can sideline you for months. Here is the exact 3-step protocol to eliminate the pain and start building your triceps correctly.

Step 1: Stop Doing Skull Crushers (For 4 Weeks)

This is the hardest and most important step. For the next 4 weeks, you will not perform any variation of the skull crusher or lying triceps extension. Zero. This allows the inflammation in your elbow tendon to subside. If you keep aggravating it, it will never heal. This doesn't mean you stop training triceps. It means you get smarter about it. During this 4-week period, you will replace the exercise with movements that don't put direct shearing force on the elbow joint. This is a non-negotiable first step. Your long-term joint health is more important than one specific exercise.

Step 2: Master These 3 Pain-Free Alternatives

During your 4-week break from skull crushers, you will build your triceps with exercises that are both effective and joint-friendly. These movements build the same muscle fibers without the dangerous elbow angle. Pick two of these and perform them twice a week.

  1. Close-Grip Bench Press: This is a powerhouse for overall triceps mass. Lie on a flat bench and grip the barbell with your hands about 8-10 inches apart (shoulder-width). Lower the bar to your lower chest, keeping your elbows tucked in at a 45-degree angle to your body. Press up forcefully. Perform 3 sets of 6-10 reps.
  2. Cable Pushdowns (with Rope): This is a fantastic isolation exercise. Set the pulley to a high position. Grab the rope attachment and pull it down until your arms are fully extended. Focus on squeezing your triceps at the bottom of the movement. Don't use momentum. Perform 3 sets of 12-15 reps.
  3. Dips (Machine Assisted or Bodyweight): Dips are one of the best triceps builders, period. If you can't do bodyweight dips, use the assisted machine. Keep your torso upright to emphasize the triceps (leaning forward hits the chest more). Lower yourself until your upper arms are parallel to the floor. Perform 3 sets to failure (aim for the 8-15 rep range).

Step 3: Reintroduce the Lying Triceps Extension (The Right Way)

After 4 weeks of zero pain, you can reintroduce the movement, but you will never call it a 'skull crusher' again. You will perform a Lying Triceps Extension. Start with an empty EZ-bar (usually 20-25 pounds). The weight is irrelevant; form is everything.

  1. The Setup: Lie on a flat bench with an EZ-bar. Hold it with a narrow grip directly over your upper chest, arms fully extended.
  2. The Angle: Before you lower the weight, move your arms back so the bar is over your hairline, about 15-20 degrees from vertical. This is the most important part. This pre-loads the triceps and changes the entire arc of the movement.
  3. The Movement: From this angled position, bend *only* at the elbows. Lower the bar in a smooth arc until it is behind your head. Your elbows should point to the ceiling the entire time-do not let them flare out.
  4. The Extension: Extend your arms and push the bar back up along the same arc to the starting position over your hairline. Squeeze the triceps hard at the top.

Start with 3 sets of 15 reps with just the bar. Only add 5 pounds per week if you experience zero pain.

What to Expect: Your 60-Day Pain-Free Timeline

Fixing this issue isn't an overnight process. It requires patience and discipline. Here’s a realistic timeline for what you should feel as you follow the protocol. If you deviate from this, you risk re-injury.

  • Week 1-2: You've stopped doing skull crushers completely. The initial sharp pain in your elbow should decrease by 75% or more within the first 14 days. You'll be focusing on close-grip presses and pushdowns. You might be surprised at how much you can lift on these movements without any pain, and your triceps will be getting a great workout.
  • Week 3-4: The lingering elbow ache should be gone. You feel strong on your alternative exercises. Your confidence is growing because you're training hard without pain. This is the period where your tendon is truly healing. Do not rush back to the old exercise.
  • Week 5-8 (Month 2): You begin re-introducing the Lying Triceps Extension with an empty bar, focusing on the 15-degree angle and lowering the bar behind your head. It will feel different, and you'll feel the stretch in your muscle belly, not the joint. You will slowly add weight, no more than 5 pounds per week. By day 60, you might be lifting 50-60 pounds for reps, completely pain-free, and wondering why you ever did them the old, painful way.
Mofilo

You read this far. You're serious.

Track food, workouts, and your purpose with Mofilo. Download today.

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play
Dashboard
Workout
Food Log

Frequently Asked Questions

The Best Bar for This Exercise

Always choose an EZ-bar over a straight bar. The angled grips on the EZ-bar allow for a more natural wrist and elbow position, reducing stress on the joints. A straight bar forces your wrists into a fully pronated position that can radiate stress up into the elbow.

Dumbbells vs. Barbell for Elbow Pain

Dumbbells are an excellent alternative. Performing lying triceps extensions with dumbbells allows each arm to move independently, which can correct muscle imbalances. Using a neutral grip (palms facing each other) is often the most comfortable position for people with elbow issues.

How to Tell If It's Injury or Just Soreness

Muscle soreness (DOMS) is a dull, widespread ache in the muscle belly, usually felt 24-48 hours after a workout. Joint pain is different. It's often sharp, stabbing, and located at a specific point on the joint. You feel it *during* the exercise, not just after. Pain is a stop signal; soreness is a sign of effective work.

The Role of Forearm Strength in Elbow Pain

Weak grip and forearm muscles can contribute to elbow instability. When your forearms can't properly support the weight, your body may compensate by altering movement patterns, which can strain the elbow. Adding exercises like hammer curls and reverse curls can strengthen the surrounding muscles and stabilize the joint.

Are Skull Crushers Necessary for Big Triceps?

Absolutely not. They are just one tool out of many. You can build massive, powerful triceps without ever doing a single skull crusher. Heavy close-grip bench presses, weighted dips, and progressive overload on cable pushdowns are more than enough to stimulate significant growth, often more safely.

Share this article

All content and media on Mofilo is created and published for informational purposes only. It is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition, including but not limited to eating disorders, nutritional deficiencies, injuries, or any other health concerns. If you think you may have a medical emergency or are experiencing symptoms of any health condition, call your doctor or emergency services immediately.