Exercise guide

Skull Crusher

Learn how to use skull crusher in training, choose practical loads, avoid common mistakes, and track progress in RackMath.

At a glance

How to use this lift in training.

Muscles
Triceps
Equipment
EZ bar or dumbbells, bench
Pattern
Elbow extension
Difficulty
Intermediate

Position and movement cues

Grip
Use an EZ bar or dumbbells with a grip that keeps wrists comfortable.
Feet
Plant feet and keep the body stable on the bench.
Back and chest
Keep shoulder blades set and upper arms angled slightly back if that feels better on elbows.
Range of motion
Lower toward the forehead or just behind the head, then extend elbows without letting shoulders drift wildly.
Speed
Lower slowly and extend smoothly. Avoid dive-bombing the bottom.
Elbows and knees
Keep elbows relatively narrow and pointed upward; avoid flaring them out hard.

Common mistakes

  • Elbows flaring wide
  • Turning it into a pullover
  • Dropping too fast
  • Using a grip that irritates wrists

How to practice it

Start each set by finding the same setup: stable feet, balanced grip or handles, a braced trunk, and a repeatable start position. Stop the set when the lift no longer looks like the first good rep.

For a heavy barbell lift, use the empty bar, then a few smaller jumps before your working weight. For dumbbells or machines, use one or two lighter feeler sets.

Loading and progression

Use 3-6 reps for strength practice, 6-12 reps for most muscle-building work, and 10-15+ reps for lighter accessories or skill practice.

Pick a load that feels like RPE 7-8 on the final set. Add weight only when the target reps, range of motion, and positions stay consistent.

Track it in RackMath

RackMath keeps previous weights, reps, RPE, plates, warmups, and PRs connected to the exercise so the next session starts with context.

Ready to track it?

Open RackMath to log sets, load plates, and watch progress over time.