Best Traps Exercises for Mass — Top 10 Ranked
Building traps size requires the right exercise selection. Not all traps exercises are created equal — some are dramatically better for muscle building than others. We ranked these based on muscle activation, progressive overload potential, and how well they match the 8-12 reps rep range that muscle building training demands.
Exercises are ranked by: (1) Traps muscle activation percentage, (2) compatibility with 8-12 reps rep ranges, (3) progressive overload potential, and (4) injury safety at the required intensity.
The farmer shrug walk combines a loaded carry with active shrugging to blast the upper traps, grip, and core simultaneously. Walk with heavy dumbbells while performing shrugs every few steps.
Key Form Cue
Pick up two heavy dumbbells and begin a standard farmer carry with shoulders back.
Barbell shrugs are the primary upper trap builder. Hold a heavy barbell at arm's length and elevate your shoulders straight up toward your ears.
Key Form Cue
Stand with feet shoulder-width, holding the barbell at arm's length with an overhand or mixed grip.
Dumbbell shrugs allow a slightly greater range of motion than barbells because the weights hang at your sides instead of in front. This can produce a stronger contraction at the top.
Key Form Cue
Stand with dumbbells at your sides, arms straight.
The kettlebell shrug uses the offset handle to challenge the grip differently than barbells or dumbbells while building the upper traps. Hold two kettlebells at your sides and shrug your shoulders to your ears.
Key Form Cue
Stand tall with a kettlebell in each hand, arms fully extended at your sides.
The barbell high pull is an explosive movement that combines a deadlift pull with a high elbow shrug, training the traps with heavy loads and speed. It is a power exercise used by athletes for upper-body explosiveness.
Key Form Cue
Set up as you would for a deadlift with a shoulder-width or slightly wider grip.
The dumbbell power shrug uses momentum from a slight dip and drive to handle heavier loads and overload the traps. Dip your knees slightly, then explosively shrug the dumbbells as high as possible.
Key Form Cue
Stand with heavy dumbbells at your sides, feet hip-width apart.
The barbell rack pull shrug combines a rack pull with a heavy shrug at the top, allowing you to overload the traps with supramaximal weights. Set pins at knee height, pull to lockout, and shrug at the top of each rep.
Key Form Cue
Set the barbell on rack pins at or just below knee height.
The Smith machine shrug lets you load the traps heavier than free-weight shrugs because the fixed bar path eliminates balance demands. It is ideal for trap hypertrophy with maximum weight.
Key Form Cue
Stand in the center of the Smith machine, grab the bar with a shoulder-width overhand grip.
Cable shrugs provide constant tension throughout the full range of motion, unlike free weights where tension varies. They are excellent for controlled, high-rep trap work.
Key Form Cue
Stand facing or between two low cables, holding the handles or a bar attachment.
The Smith machine behind-the-back shrug emphasizes the middle and lower traps more than the standard shrug by pulling the shoulders back during the shrug. Stand facing away from the bar, grip it behind you, and shrug straight up.
Key Form Cue
Set the bar at glute height and stand facing away from it.
Put these exercises into a real program
Revy's AI combines the best exercises for your goals into a personalized training program with progressive overload built in.