To get wider shoulders with push ups, you must stop doing endless standard reps and instead focus on 3 specific variations that change your body's leverage to target the side deltoid. You're probably doing hundreds of push-ups a week, feeling your chest and arms burn, but when you look in the mirror, your shoulders still look narrow. It’s one of the most common frustrations in bodyweight training. You feel like you're working hard, but the V-taper you want isn't happening. Here’s the truth: you’re building the wrong muscle. Standard push-ups are fantastic for your chest (pectoralis major) and the front of your shoulders (anterior deltoids). But they do almost nothing for the muscle that actually creates width: the medial deltoid, also known as the side delt. Building up your chest and front delts without building your side delts can even create the illusion of making your shoulders look narrower. It creates a forward-heavy, rounded look, not the broad, powerful frame you’re after. The secret isn’t doing more push-ups; it’s doing different push-ups. It’s about manipulating angles and leverage to force the workload onto that neglected side delt. Stop chasing high rep counts and start chasing better quality reps with the right variations.
Let’s get straight to the point. Your shoulder isn't one big muscle. It's made of three distinct parts, called heads. Think of them as three separate engines that move your arm in different directions. Understanding this is the key to unlocking real width. The three heads are:
Your problem is an imbalance. You have been pouring all your effort into the front delt, which gives you forward projection but zero width. To get wider shoulders, you must shift the focus of your training from the front delt to the side delt. The push-up variations below are designed to do exactly that. They change the angle of your body to mimic the motion of a side lateral raise, forcing the medial deltoid to finally do the work and grow.
This isn't just a list of exercises; it's a progressive plan. You will master one movement before earning the right to move to the next. This ensures you're always applying progressive overload-the non-negotiable rule for muscle growth. Do this routine 2 times per week, with at least 48 hours of rest in between. For example, Monday and Thursday. Your goal is not to hit a certain number of reps, but to perform each rep with perfect form in the 6-12 rep range. If you can do more than 12, it's time to move to the next phase.
This is your starting point. The pike push-up shifts your body's angle, placing more emphasis on your overall shoulder girdle and less on your chest. While it still hits the front delt, it begins to engage the side delt in a way a standard push-up never could.
This is where we increase the intensity. By elevating your feet, you force an even greater percentage of your bodyweight onto your shoulders, making the exercise significantly harder and more effective for growth. This is the bodyweight equivalent of adding 20 pounds to the bar.
This is the most advanced and effective variation for building shoulder width without weights. We will focus only on the eccentric, or lowering, portion of the movement. The eccentric phase is where you create the most muscle damage, which signals your body to rebuild the muscle bigger and stronger.
Progress isn't a mystery; it follows a predictable timeline. Here is exactly what you should expect when you follow the 3-phase protocol consistently. Forget about overnight transformations. This is what real, sustainable progress looks like.
After 8 weeks, you will not only be significantly stronger, but you will have laid the foundation for real shoulder width. From here, continued progress is about consistently applying overload-either by adding reps, slowing down your negatives, or moving to full range-of-motion handstand push-ups.
No, you should not stop doing standard push-ups, but their role must change. Think of them as a chest accessory, not a shoulder builder. Perform them *after* you complete your 3 sets of the shoulder-focused variations. This ensures your energy goes to building width first.
Perform this shoulder-focused push-up routine 2 times per week. Your muscles do not grow during the workout; they grow during recovery. Training your shoulders every day is counterproductive. A schedule of Monday and Thursday, or Tuesday and Friday, provides the ideal 48-72 hours of recovery time.
You cannot build a house without bricks, and you cannot build muscle without protein. To see results from this program, you must eat enough protein. A simple and effective target is 0.8 grams of protein per pound of your bodyweight. For a 170-pound person, this is 136 grams daily.
The single best weighted exercise to complement this routine is the dumbbell lateral raise. It directly isolates the side delt. If you have access to even light dumbbells (10-20 lbs), adding 3 sets of 10-15 reps after your push-ups will dramatically accelerate your results.
Wrist pain is common with floor-based exercises because of the 90-degree angle. To fix this, use a pair of push-up handles, hexagonal dumbbells, or even your knuckles on a soft surface. This keeps your wrists in a straight, neutral position, eliminating the strain and allowing you to focus on the movement.
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