TL;DR
- Lateral raises are a Bottom Start exercise — the first number is the concentric (raising the dumbbells)
- Best hypertrophy tempo: 0-1-2-4 for roughly 7 seconds of tension per rep
- Use much lighter weight than you think — tempo lateral raises with 5-10 lb dumbbells will humble you
- Focus on leading with your elbows, not your hands, to isolate the lateral deltoid
The lateral raise is arguably the single most important exercise for building wide, rounded shoulders. The lateral (or medial) deltoid is the muscle responsible for shoulder width, and it's almost impossible to develop fully without direct isolation work. But here's the problem: the lateral raise is also one of the most commonly butchered exercises in the gym.
Walk into any gym and you'll see people swinging heavy dumbbells up to shoulder height using momentum, their traps doing most of the work while their lateral delts barely fire. Tempo training eliminates every one of these compensations. When you have to raise a weight over 2 seconds and lower it over 4, there's nowhere to hide. Either your lateral delts are doing the work, or you can't complete the rep. That's the beauty of it.
The lateral deltoid is a small, stubborn muscle with a high proportion of slow-twitch fibers. This means it responds best to higher reps and longer time under tension — exactly what tempo training delivers. Research on shoulder training consistently shows that moderate loads with controlled eccentrics produce superior lateral delt growth compared to heavy, explosive sets.
Top Start vs Bottom Start: Why It Matters
The lateral raise is a Bottom Start exercise. You begin with your arms hanging at your sides (the bottom position), and the first movement is the concentric — raising the dumbbells out to the sides.
In Lifting Tempo's 4-digit notation for Bottom Start exercises, the numbers represent: Concentric – Top Squeeze – Eccentric – Bottom Pause. For lateral raises, this maps to:
- First number — Raising the dumbbells to shoulder height (concentric)
- Second number — Holding at the top with arms parallel to the floor (top squeeze)
- Third number — Lowering the dumbbells back down (eccentric)
- Fourth number — Pausing at the bottom with arms at your sides
This distinction matters because Bottom Start exercises emphasize the concentric and top squeeze differently than Top Start exercises. The lateral raise has a very short range of motion, which makes every second of time under tension even more valuable. A 4-second eccentric on a movement with only about 18 inches of travel demands extremely precise control.
Recommended Tempos
| Goal | Tempo | Time per Rep | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hypertrophy | 0-1-2-4 | ~7 sec | Controlled raise, brief squeeze, slow lower; ideal for lateral delt growth |
| Strength | 0-0-1-3 | ~4 sec | Faster tempo allows slightly heavier dumbbells |
| Rehab | 1-2-3-5 | ~11 sec | Ultra-slow for shoulder impingement recovery; use very light weight |
| Beginner | 0-1-2-3 | ~6 sec | Teaches the movement pattern with manageable time under tension |
For most lifters, the 0-1-2-4 hypertrophy tempo is the go-to choice. The "0" concentric means you raise the dumbbells at a natural pace (usually about 1-1.5 seconds), squeeze at shoulder height for 1 second, then take a full 4 seconds to lower them back to your sides. The 4-second eccentric is transformative — it forces your lateral delts to resist the load through the entire descent, creating maximum mechanical tension with minimal joint stress.
The rehab tempo of 1-2-3-5 deserves special mention. If you're dealing with shoulder impingement or rotator cuff irritation, ultra-slow lateral raises with 3-5 lb dumbbells can be therapeutic. The slow speed keeps joint forces low while increasing blood flow to the shoulder capsule and strengthening the stabilizing muscles around the joint.
Phase-by-Phase Breakdown
Concentric Phase — Raising the Dumbbells
Stand with your feet shoulder-width apart, a slight bend in your knees, and a dumbbell in each hand at your sides. Raise both dumbbells out to the sides by abducting your arms until they reach shoulder height — no higher. The movement should originate from your shoulder joint, not your wrists or elbows. Lead with your elbows: imagine someone has strings attached to your elbows pulling them up toward the ceiling. Your pinkies should be level with or slightly higher than your thumbs at the top — think of pouring water from a pitcher. This slight internal rotation maximizes lateral delt engagement.
Top Squeeze — Hold at Shoulder Height
At the top of the rep, your arms should be parallel to the floor with your elbows slightly bent (roughly 15-20 degrees). Squeeze and hold. This is the point of maximum leverage disadvantage for the lateral delt, making the isometric hold brutally effective. Don't let your arms drift above shoulder height — going higher shifts the work to your upper traps. Focus on feeling the burn directly on the outer cap of your shoulder.
Eccentric Phase — Slow, Controlled Lowering
This is where the growth happens. Lower the dumbbells back to your sides over the full prescribed duration. A 4-second eccentric on lateral raises feels significantly longer than on larger movements because the lateral delt is a small muscle working against constant resistance. Fight the urge to let the weights drop. The descent should be perfectly smooth — if the dumbbells are jerking or accelerating at any point, you've lost control. Maintain the same slight elbow bend throughout. Your lateral delts should be screaming by the third or fourth rep of each set.
Bottom Position — Arms at Your Sides
At the bottom, let the dumbbells hang at your sides but don't completely relax. Maintain a slight engagement in your shoulders — don't let them round forward or shrug up. If your tempo prescribes a pause here, hold this position while keeping the lateral delts activated. This pause prevents you from using momentum to bounce into the next rep and ensures every concentric starts from a position of pure muscular initiation.
Common Tempo Mistakes with Lateral Raises
Using Too Much Weight
This is mistake number one and it's universal. The lateral deltoid is a small muscle with poor leverage. Most people who lateral raise 30 lb dumbbells with momentum would struggle with 10-15 lb dumbbells at a 0-1-2-4 tempo. Leave your ego at the door. The lateral delt doesn't know or care how much the dumbbell weighs — it only knows tension and time. Five-pound dumbbells at a 4-second eccentric for 15 reps will produce far more lateral delt growth than 25-pound dumbbells swung up and dropped in 1 second for 8 sloppy reps.
Swinging the Dumbbells Up
When lifters try to maintain tempo with too-heavy weight, the first compensation is always momentum. They lean their torso forward, then snap upright to launch the dumbbells. Or they bend their knees and use a small hip drive to get the weight moving. Tempo training should eliminate all of this. If you cannot raise the dumbbells to shoulder height using only your lateral delts at a smooth, controlled pace, reduce the weight. Stand with a slight forward lean (5-10 degrees) to keep tension on the lateral delt throughout the range of motion.
Shrugging Traps Instead of Using Delts
The upper trapezius is a strong, dominant muscle that loves to take over during lateral raises — especially as fatigue sets in. If your shoulders are creeping up toward your ears during your tempo sets, your traps are doing the work instead of your lateral delts. Before each set, actively depress your shoulder blades: pull your shoulders down and away from your ears. Maintain this depressed position throughout every phase of the tempo. A helpful cue is to imagine you're pushing the dumbbells away from your body rather than lifting them up.
Perfect Reps, Every Set
Lifting Tempo's audio and haptic cues keep your lateral raises honest — no more rushing the eccentric or skipping the squeeze.
Frequently Asked Questions
What tempo should I use for rear delt raises?
Rear delt raises respond to the same Bottom Start tempos as lateral raises. A 0-1-2-4 tempo works well for hypertrophy. The key difference is body position — you'll be bent over at the hips or lying face-down on an incline bench. Because the rear delts are even smaller and weaker than the lateral delts, use lighter weight than your lateral raises. A 0-2-3-5 tempo with very light dumbbells is excellent for building a strong mind-muscle connection with the rear delts, which many lifters struggle to feel during normal-speed reps.
Is cable or dumbbell lateral raise better for tempo training?
Cable lateral raises have a significant advantage for tempo training: constant tension. With dumbbells, the resistance curve is uneven — there's almost no tension at the very bottom of the movement and maximum tension at shoulder height. Cables maintain resistance throughout the entire range of motion, making the slow eccentric phase more challenging and more productive from bottom to top. If you have access to a cable machine, use it for your primary tempo lateral raise work. The constant tension profile means every second of your 4-second eccentric is equally demanding on the lateral delt.
What is the best tempo for capped delts?
For that round, capped shoulder look, consistency matters more than any single tempo. Use the 0-1-2-4 hypertrophy tempo on lateral raises for 12-15 reps across 4-5 sets, and train them 2-3 times per week. The lateral deltoid recovers quickly and can handle high training frequency. Pair your tempo lateral raises with tempo overhead pressing (using a Top Start tempo like 3-1-2-0) for complete deltoid development. The combination of the compound press for overall mass and the isolation lateral raise for width is the proven formula for impressive shoulders. Track your progressive overload — even adding 1 rep per set each week while maintaining strict tempo means you're growing.