Loading exercises...
Exercise Finder
TRAIN
SMARTER
NOT
HARDER
Pick a muscle group or browse all exercises — with instructions, tips, and common mistakes for every movement.
Select Muscle
Click a muscle to browse
Browse by Muscle Group
Browse by Equipment
Browse by Training Style
Quick Start — Workout Splits
Pre-made Dumbbell Workouts
0 Exercises
Clear
Dumbbell Standing Reverse Curl
Similar Exercises
Band Wrist Curl Single Arm
Band Wrist Curl Single Arm
Resistance Band · Pull
B
Reverse Curl Barbell
Reverse Curl Barbell
Barbell · Pull
I
Barbell Palm Down Wrist Curl Over A Bench
Barbell Palm Down Wrist Curl Over A Bench
Barbell · Push
I
Barbell Standing Back Wrist Curl
Barbell Standing Back Wrist Curl
Barbell · Pull
I
Barbell Wrist Curl On Knees
Barbell Wrist Curl On Knees
Barbell · Pull
I
Barbell Wrist Curl Wide Legs
Barbell Wrist Curl Wide Legs
Barbell · Pull
I
Barbell Wrist Extension On Knees
Barbell Wrist Extension On Knees
Barbell · Pull
I
Wrist Curl Barbell
Wrist Curl Barbell
Barbell · Pull
I
HomeForearms › Dumbbell Standing Reverse Curl
Dumbbell Standing Reverse Curl
Forearms Dumbbell Pull Strength
Your Goal General Fitness
Sets
2–3
Reps
10–15
Rest
60s
How To Perform
1
Stand or sit with the weight in hand, elbow pinned at your side.
2
Curl the weight toward your shoulder by bending only at the elbow.
3
Squeeze the bicep hard at the top of the movement.
4
Lower the weight slowly back to full extension — a full stretch at the bottom builds more muscle.
5
Avoid swinging or using momentum — keep the upper arm perfectly still.
Pro Tips
Slow the eccentric down to 3-4 seconds — it puts more stress on the bicep for the same weight.
Full extension at the bottom gives a better stretch and activates more muscle fibers.
Try a slight forward lean at the start — it pre-stretches the bicep for greater activation.
Overview

A biceps movement using a dumbbell that loads the biceps through its full range, with Forearms picking up the supporting work. One of the more effective exercises for building size and strength in this area.

Muscles Worked
Biceps
75%
Forearms
42%
Brachialis
32%
Common Mistakes
Swinging the body to get the weight up — that's your lower back doing the work, not the bicep.
Not lowering to full extension — cutting the range of motion short limits growth.
Moving the upper arms forward during the curl instead of keeping them pinned.
About Training Your Forearms

The forearms control grip strength and the movement of the wrist and fingers, and well-developed forearms improve performance on nearly every pulling, carrying, and pressing exercise. The main muscles are the wrist flexors on the inner forearm, the wrist extensors on the outer forearm, and the brachioradialis, which also assists in elbow flexion.

Forearms receive a great deal of indirect work from deadlifts, rows, pull-ups, and any exercise that challenges your grip, which is why many lifters never train them directly. To bring up lagging forearms or maximise grip, direct work helps: wrist curls and reverse wrist curls train the flexors and extensors, reverse curls build the brachioradialis and forearm thickness, and loaded carries such as farmer's walks build crushing grip strength and overall robustness.

Forearms are dense with endurance-oriented muscle fibres and tolerate — even prefer — higher rep ranges and frequency. Training them in the 12 to 20 rep range several times per week, often at the end of a pulling or arm session, produces steady gains. Because grip is involved in so much of your training, stronger forearms translate directly into being able to hold heavier weights for more reps across the board.

Use the popular forearm and grip exercises below to round out your arm development and build a stronger, more capable grip.

Popular Forearms exercises:
Add to workout