Loading...

What Can I Do Instead of Dips at Home

Mofilo TeamMofilo Team
8 min read

Stop Trying to Do Dips at Home. Do This Instead.

If you're asking 'what can I do instead of dips at home,' the answer for 90% of people is the close-grip push-up. It builds more functional strength and targets the exact same muscles-triceps and chest-without putting your shoulder joint in a high-risk position. Many people try to replicate dips at home using wobbly chairs or the edge of a couch, feel a sharp pain in their shoulder, and quit. This isn't a failure of your strength; it's a failure of the exercise in a home environment. Dips require stable, parallel bars, which almost nobody has. The common alternative, bench dips, forces your shoulders into an internally rotated position under load, which is a fast track to injury for many. Instead of forcing a bad exercise, you need a better one. The three best alternatives you can do today are the close-grip push-up (using just your bodyweight), the dumbbell floor press (if you have weights), and the banded tricep pushdown (if you have bands). These exercises provide a superior training stimulus with a fraction of the injury risk.

Why Dips Are a High-Risk, Medium-Reward Exercise

The reason dips feel so precarious is biomechanical. During a dip, especially a bench dip where your hands are behind you, your humerus (upper arm bone) glides forward in the shoulder socket. This movement, combined with deep internal rotation under your full bodyweight, can pinch the delicate tendons and bursa in your shoulder, a condition known as shoulder impingement. For every person who builds a huge chest with dips, there are 10 who develop nagging shoulder pain that stops them from training altogether. The risk-to-reward ratio is simply not worth it for most people, especially when safer and equally effective options exist. The primary muscles worked in a dip are the triceps and the pectoralis major (chest), with some anterior deltoid (front shoulder) involvement. A close-grip push-up or a neutral-grip dumbbell press hits the exact same muscles. The key difference is stability. In a push-up or floor press, your shoulder blades are pinned against a stable surface (the floor), allowing you to generate maximum force through your chest and triceps safely. With a dip, your entire upper body is unstable, forcing your small stabilizer muscles to work overtime, which often leads to failure in the shoulder joint before you ever fatigue the target muscles. You get a better workout by choosing an exercise that lets you push to your limit without your joints screaming for help.

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-Level Progression Plan for Dip Alternatives

Forget about dips for the next 12 weeks. This three-level plan will build stronger triceps and a bigger chest using equipment you actually have. Pick the level that matches your current equipment and strength. The goal is progressive overload: doing more over time. That means more reps, more sets, or more weight.

Level 1: The Foundation (Bodyweight Only)

The best bodyweight substitute for dips is the close-grip push-up. It hammers your triceps and chest while keeping your shoulders in a safe, strong position.

  • The Exercise: Close-Grip Push-up.
  • How to Perform: Get into a standard push-up position, but place your hands directly under your shoulders or slightly closer. As you lower your body, keep your elbows tucked in at a 45-degree angle to your torso. Don't let them flare out. Lower until your chest is about 2-3 inches from the floor, pause, and press back up explosively.
  • Beginner Protocol: If you can't do 8 reps on your toes, start with your knees on the floor. Perform 3 sets of 10-12 reps. Once you can complete all 3 sets, move to your toes.
  • Intermediate Protocol: Perform 3 sets to failure, aiming for 15-25 reps per set. Once you can hit 25 reps on your first set, it's time to make it harder.
  • How to Progress: Elevate your feet on a stack of books or a small stool. Even a 6-inch elevation dramatically increases the load on your chest and triceps.

Level 2: Adding Load (If You Have Dumbbells)

If you have a pair of dumbbells, the dumbbell floor press is your best choice. It completely removes the shoulder from the equation and forces a strict range of motion, making it incredible for building raw pressing power.

  • The Exercise: Neutral-Grip Dumbbell Floor Press.
  • How to Perform: Lie on your back with your knees bent and feet flat on the floor. Hold a dumbbell in each hand with your palms facing each other (a neutral grip). Press the weights up until your arms are fully extended. Lower them slowly until your triceps make contact with the floor. Pause for one full second, then press back up. The pause on the floor eliminates momentum and builds power from a dead stop.
  • Starting Weight: Men should start with 20-35 lb dumbbells. Women can start with 10-20 lb dumbbells.
  • The Protocol: Perform 4 sets of 8-12 reps. When you can successfully complete all 4 sets of 12 reps, it's time to increase the weight by 5 pounds.

Level 3: Isolation and High Reps (If You Have Bands)

Resistance bands are perfect for isolating the triceps with high reps, which is key for muscle growth. This is an excellent exercise to do after your push-ups or presses.

  • The Exercise: Banded Tricep Pushdown.
  • How to Perform: Anchor a resistance band to the top of a closed door. Grab the band with both hands and take a step back to create tension. Pin your elbows to your sides-they should not move for the entire exercise. Extend your arms downward until they are completely straight, squeezing your triceps hard at the bottom. Control the band as it returns to the starting position.
  • The Protocol: Perform 3 sets of 20-30 reps. The goal here is to pump the muscle full of blood. Focus on the squeeze at the bottom of each rep. Once you can do 30 reps, move to a thicker band or slow down the tempo, taking 3 seconds to lower the weight.

Your First 30 Days Without Dips: A Timeline

Switching exercises can feel like a step backward at first, but it's actually the first step forward. Here is what you should realistically expect when you replace dips with these smarter alternatives.

  • Week 1: You will feel weaker, and your triceps will be significantly more sore than usual. If you were doing sloppy dips, your nervous system was used to that pattern. Now, you're learning a new, stricter movement like the close-grip push-up. Your rep count might be low, like 5-8 reps. This is not a sign of weakness; it's a sign you're finally doing the exercise correctly and challenging the target muscles. Any shoulder pain you felt during dips should already start to disappear.
  • Weeks 2-4: This is where you'll feel the progress. Your form will feel more natural, and your strength will increase noticeably. You should be able to add 2-4 reps to each set of your push-ups or increase the weight on your floor press by 5 pounds. The soreness will be less intense as your muscles adapt. You'll feel the contraction in your triceps and chest, not in your shoulder joint.
  • Day 30 and Beyond: By the end of the first month, you will be stronger than you were with dips. The 8 clean close-grip push-ups you can now do are far more valuable than the 10 painful dips you were doing before. Your triceps will look and feel denser because you're able to fatigue them properly without being limited by joint pain. You've built a solid, pain-free foundation for long-term growth.
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

Are Push-ups a Perfect Substitute for Dips?

Close-grip push-ups are a superior substitute for 9 out of 10 people. They effectively target the triceps and chest with significantly less shoulder strain. While parallel bar dips can emphasize the lower chest slightly more, the overall muscle-building stimulus and safety profile of a close-grip push-up make it a better choice for home workouts.

The Minimum Equipment for These Alternatives

Nothing. You can build significant strength and muscle with just your bodyweight using close-grip push-ups and their variations. For less than $100, a single pair of adjustable dumbbells (up to 50 lbs) and a set of resistance bands will provide you with everything you need to progress for years.

How to Know if an Exercise is Working

Progress is measured in the logbook. If you can perform one more rep than last week or lift 2.5 pounds more weight with good form, the exercise is working. You should also feel the target muscles-your chest and triceps-fatiguing during the set, not a sharp pain in your shoulder or wrist joints.

When It's Safe to Try Dips Again

If you have access to sturdy, parallel dip bars (not chairs), you can consider re-introducing them after building a strong base for 8-12 weeks with these alternatives. Start with partial reps, focusing on a pain-free range of motion. If you feel any pinching in your shoulder, stop immediately and stick to the safer variations.

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.