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Low Resistance Band Lying Bicep Curl Half Repetition
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HomeBiceps › Low Resistance Band Lying Bicep Curl Half Repetition
Low Resistance Band Lying Bicep Curl Half Repetition
Biceps Resistance Band 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

This biceps exercise using a band places direct tension on the biceps, with Forearms picking up the supporting work. The movement pattern makes it well suited for both beginners building a base and experienced lifters adding volume.

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 Biceps

The biceps brachii is the muscle most people picture when they think of arm training. It sits on the front of the upper arm and has two heads — a long head on the outer arm and a short head on the inner arm — that together flex the elbow and rotate the forearm so the palm faces up (supination). Working alongside it are the brachialis, which lies underneath and pushes the biceps up to add peak and width, and the brachioradialis of the upper forearm.

Although the biceps is a small muscle, it responds extremely well to direct training and a higher frequency than most lifters use. The classic curl is the cornerstone, but the angle and grip you choose change which part of the muscle is emphasised. Standing barbell and dumbbell curls build overall mass. Incline curls put the long head on stretch and develop the outer biceps. Preacher curls isolate the short head and remove momentum. Hammer curls, performed with a neutral grip, target the brachialis and brachioradialis to thicken the whole arm.

For growth, the biceps thrive on moderate to high rep ranges, typically 8 to 15, with a focus on full range of motion and a hard squeeze at the top. Because the muscle is small and recovers quickly, training it two or even three times per week — including the work it already gets from back exercises — is both safe and productive for most people.

The most common mistake in biceps training is using too much weight and swinging the torso to heave the dumbbells up. This shifts the load onto the front delts and lower back and robs the biceps of tension. Instead, keep the elbows pinned to your sides, control the lowering phase for a full second or two, and resist the urge to let the weight drop. Avoid fully relaxing at the bottom of each rep; keeping constant tension produces a much stronger growth stimulus than ego-driven heavy partials.

Strong biceps are not just about appearance — they contribute to grip strength, pulling power, and elbow health. Pairing direct curl work with the heavy pulling you already do for back creates the best of both worlds. Use the popular biceps exercises below to build a focused arm routine.

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