10 Best Dumbbell Back Exercises to Build Strength at Home

Reviewed byg1v.me Team
PublishedJun 07, 2026 · 10 min read
10 Best Dumbbell Back Exercises to Build Strength at Home

Introduction

Your back is one of the largest muscle groups in your body — and one of the most important to protect while losing weight. Here are 10 dumbbell back exercises you can do with nothing but a pair of weights.

Your back is one of the largest muscle groups in your body, spanning from your shoulders to your hips. It powers nearly every pulling movement, holds your posture upright, and burns a meaningful share of your daily calories simply by existing. Yet it is the most neglected muscle group for people who train at home — because most home workouts are heavy on pushing (push-ups) and light on pulling.

That is a mistake, especially if you are losing weight. When you are in a calorie deficit, your body will shed muscle it isn't using. A 2022 meta-analysis found that an energy deficit blunts your ability to build lean mass from training — which means the training you do has to count, and you cannot afford to skip a muscle group as large as your back. Train it, and you preserve metabolically active tissue and a strong, balanced posture. Round out your trunk with our ab workouts guide. Skip it, and it is one of the first things to disappear.

The best part: you do not need a cable machine, a pull-up bar, or a barbell. A single pair of dumbbells can train your entire back. Every move in this guide has a short form-video demo in our back exercises library. This guide is part of our larger resource on muscle-preserving workouts on weight-loss medication.

A quick map of your back muscles

Knowing what you are training helps you feel the right muscles working. Your back has three main areas:

  • Lats (latissimus dorsi): the large, wing-shaped muscles on the sides of your back. They create the "V" taper and drive any pulling-down or pulling-back motion.
  • Traps and rhomboids (upper/mid back): the muscles between and above your shoulder blades. They retract your shoulders and fix slouching posture.
  • Rear deltoids: the back of your shoulders, technically part of the shoulder but trained with most back movements and crucial for shoulder balance.

A complete back routine hits all three. For programming beyond dumbbells, see our broader back workouts guide. The exercises below — drawn from the open-source wger exercise library and organized by the muscles they emphasize — cover every one.

Lat-focused exercises

1. Bent-over dumbbell row

The single most important back exercise you can do with dumbbells. Watch the form video. Hinge forward at the hips with a flat back, let the dumbbells hang, then pull both toward your lower ribs by driving your elbows back. Squeeze your shoulder blades at the top and lower under control.

3–4 sets of 8–12 reps.

2. One-arm dumbbell row

Place one knee and one hand on a bench or sturdy chair, let a single dumbbell hang from your free hand, and row it toward your hip. Training one side at a time lets you use a heavier weight and fixes strength imbalances between your left and right sides. Watch the form video.

3 sets of 10 per side.

3. Dumbbell pullover

Lie across a bench (or on the floor) holding one dumbbell with both hands above your chest. Keeping your arms nearly straight, lower the weight back behind your head in an arc, feeling a deep stretch through your lats, then pull it back over your chest. A unique exercise that trains the lats through a long stretch.

3 sets of 12.

4. Incline chest-supported row

Lie face-down on an incline bench set to about 45 degrees with a dumbbell in each hand. Row both weights up toward your hips. Because your chest is supported, this version removes all momentum and lower-back strain — your back muscles do every bit of the work. Watch the form video. Ideal if you have a cranky lower back.

3 sets of 12.

5. Helms row

A chest-supported single-arm row named after researcher Eric Helms. Set up on an incline bench and row one dumbbell at a time with a strict, controlled tempo. The strict form makes it superb for genuinely feeling the back muscles contract.

3 sets of 10 per side.

Upper-back and trap-focused exercises

6. Renegade row

Start in a push-up position with a dumbbell in each hand. Row one dumbbell toward your hip while bracing hard through your core to keep your hips level, then switch. This trains your back and your entire midsection at once — efficient when your training time or energy is limited. Watch the form video.

3 sets of 6–8 per side.

7. Bent high pull

Hinge forward, hold the dumbbells in front of you, and pull them up toward your chest with your elbows leading high and wide. This emphasizes the upper traps and rear shoulders — the muscles that pull your shoulders back and combat a hunched posture.

3 sets of 12.

8. Dumbbell rear-delt row

A row performed with your elbows flared out wide rather than tucked in. The wide elbow path shifts the emphasis onto the rear shoulders and upper-back muscles between your shoulder blades.

3 sets of 12.

Rear-shoulder and posture exercises

9. Rear delt raise (reverse fly)

Hinge forward and, with a light dumbbell in each hand, raise your arms out to the sides like wings, squeezing your shoulder blades together, then lower slowly. Use a deliberately light weight — this small muscle responds to control, not load. One of the best single exercises for shoulder health and posture.

3 sets of 15.

10. Incline Y-raise

Lie face-down on an incline bench with light dumbbells and raise your arms overhead into a "Y" shape, thumbs pointing up. This trains the lower traps, a chronically weak area that, when strengthened, dramatically improves how your shoulders sit.

3 sets of 12.

How to program these into a workout

You do not need all ten exercises in one session — that would be overkill. Instead, pick three to four per back day, choosing at least one from each section so you cover lats, upper back, and rear shoulders.

A balanced dumbbell back day: - Bent-over dumbbell row — 4 sets of 10 - One-arm dumbbell row — 3 sets of 10 per side - Bent high pull — 3 sets of 12 - Rear delt raise — 3 sets of 15

Train your back at least once or twice a week. The CDC guidelines recommend working all major muscle groups on two or more days per week, and your back is too large to leave out. If you also train with bands, our resistance band workout for weight loss includes band-based pulling movements you can rotate in.

Form and progression tips

  • Lead with your elbows, not your hands. On every row, think about driving your elbow backward. This keeps the tension on your back instead of letting your biceps take over.
  • Squeeze at the top. Pause for a beat at the peak of each rep and consciously pinch your shoulder blades together.
  • Go heavy enough to matter. As the 2022 meta-analysis underscores, building or preserving lean mass in a deficit requires a real challenge. The last two reps of each set should be genuinely hard.
  • Progress gradually. Add a small amount of weight or one more rep when a weight starts to feel easy.

Warm up your back first

The back muscles and the shoulder joints they cross respond poorly to being loaded cold. Before your first working set, spend five minutes doing the following:

  • Cat-cow: on all fours, alternate arching and rounding your spine for 30 seconds to wake up the whole back.
  • Band or towel pull-aparts: 15 easy reps to switch on the upper-back muscles.
  • Light row sets: do your first row exercise for one set with a very light dumbbell, focusing purely on feeling the muscles, before adding weight.

This primes the muscles you are about to train and noticeably improves how much you feel the right areas working.

How heavy should the dumbbells be?

This is the most common question, and the answer is simple: heavy enough that the last two reps of each set are hard, but not so heavy that your form breaks down. For most rows, that means a weight you can move for 8 to 12 clean reps. For the smaller rear-shoulder movements (rear delt raise, Y-raise), go deliberately light — these muscles are tiny and respond to control, not load. Using too much weight on them just turns the exercise into a sloppy shrug.

If you only own one or two pairs of dumbbells, you can still progress by adding reps, adding sets, slowing the lowering phase, or shortening your rest between sets. None of those require buying more equipment.

Common back-training mistakes

  • Pulling with your arms instead of your back. If you feel rows mostly in your biceps, you are bending your arms too early. Initiate every pull by driving your elbow back and squeezing your shoulder blade.
  • Rounding your lower back on bent-over movements. A rounded spine under load is the main injury risk here. Keep a flat back by pushing your hips back and bracing your core; if you cannot maintain it, use the chest-supported variations instead.
  • Rushing the reps. Momentum robs the muscle of tension. Lower each rep over two to three seconds.
  • Never changing anything. Muscles adapt. If you have done the same weight for the same reps for a month, it is time to add load or volume.

Fuel the work

Training breaks muscle down; protein and recovery build it back. As Harvard Health notes, strength training delivers benefits well beyond muscle size — including better metabolism, bone density, and blood sugar control. To get the muscle-building payoff while losing weight, pair these workouts with adequate protein; our guide to high-protein meals for weight loss shows how, even on a suppressed appetite.

The bottom line

A strong back is the difference between losing weight and looking deflated versus losing weight and looking lean and upright. With nothing but a pair of dumbbells and ten exercises to rotate through, you can train every part of it from home. Pick a few per session, train your back twice a week, lead with your elbows, and progress over time.

As MedlinePlus reminds us, the strength you build today pays dividends in balance, posture, and independence for decades to come.

*This article is educational and not a substitute for personalized medical advice. Consult your clinician before starting a new exercise program.*

#exercises-/-workouts

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