While there’s no way to make the bones in your wrists bigger, most bodybuilders think it’s actually an advantage to have skinnier wrists, because it helps to emphasize the forearm muscles, making them look bigger. Building strength and thickness in your wrists is a matter of finding the right exercises that will build strength and flexibility, then committing to a training regimen that works for you.
Things You Should Know
- Stretch your wrists before doing exercises. It can help to stretch your wrists after performing exercises, as well.
- Hold a dumbbell with your palm facing up, lower it slowly toward the floor, and bring it back up.
 Do 2 sets of 10-15 reps several times a week.
- Add exercises like bicep curls, plate pinches, and knuckle pushups to your weekly wrist workout. Aim for 2-3 sets of 10-15 reps per exercise.
Steps
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Warm up your wrists. Before working your wrist muscles, warm them up by performing unweighted wrist movements. These could include hand circles and wrist flexions and extensions. This helps gradually loosen the wrist area and prepares you for training your wrists.EXPERT TIPCertified Fitness TrainerMichele Dolan is a Fitness Trainer based in Sidney, British Columbia. She has been a personal trainer and fitness instructor since 2002, and was certified as a Personal Trainer by the British Columbia Recreation and Parks Association (BCRPA). Michele is also a Registered Clinical Counselor, and uses her 20+ years of fitness coaching experience to help clients understand their mind-body connection. She is a Registered Clinical Counsellor (RCC) and Certified Clinical Counsellor (CCC), certified by the British Columbia Association of Clinical Counsellors and the Canadian Counselling and Psychotherapy Association. In her work, Michele uses the tools of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Dialectic Behavior Therapy and Cognitive Processing Therapy for Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome. She practices and teaches mindfulness and acceptance in all of her coaching work. She holds a Master’s Degree in Counselling Psychology.
Michele Dolan, a certified personal trainer, recommends: "Push-ups, chin-ups, and pull-ups are good wrist strengtheners. Climbing and carrying heavy dumbbells at your sides also build wrist strength."
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Practice wrist extensions. Wrist extensions are an easy exercise that you can start doing at home to increase flexibility in the forearm muscles that power your wrist. Doing wrist extensions is the best way to gradually start getting bigger wrists.
- Rest the back of your forearm on a table or on your leg. Your palm should be facing up, and your hand should be aligned with your arm.
- Place a light weight in that hand, then slowly lower the weight toward the floor. The movement should take you five seconds, then bring the wrist back up to starting position.

- Do two sets of 10 or 15 reps with each wrist four or five times a week.
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Do radial training. Radial training works much like wrist extensions, except you're emphasizing a different muscle motion by changing the direction of the exercise. This type of exercise is very common in physical rehabilitation routines after wrist injuries, and you can do radial wrist exercises at home.
- Grab a dumbbell, then stand with your arms at your side. Tilt the dumbbell toward the ceiling and slowly lower it down. Do two sets of 10 or 15 reps with each wrist four or five times a week.
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Do wrist releases. This is an excellent way of stretching your wrists out at the end of a work out, decreasing the possibility of injury or soreness. [1] X Research source Do this at the end of each exercise routine.
- Place one hand on the back of the other with the hand flexed towards the wrist. Hold the hand in place by applying some pressure on it and move the forearm lower to increase the angle. Hold for six to ten seconds, then work the opposite arm.
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Stretch out your wrists. Doing wrist stretches is an important part of working up to any strength training routine that you want to integrate into your overall fitness. Especially if you've got small or "weak" wrists, it's a good idea to stretch things out before you get started.
- Get on your hands and knees and place your hands flat on the ground with your fingers pointing back toward your body. Keep your arms straight and locked and stretch your wrists gently. Don't force them. Count to fifteen.
- When you get comfortable with that stretch, try to extend your legs out behind you and bring your hips down to the ground while pushing your torso up by fully extending your arms with your palms flat on the floor. In yoga, this is called the "cobra pose" and it can be very effective at stretching your wrists.
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Be patient . Building strength takes time, which means you need to be patient. You're not going to do a couple exercises and wake up tomorrow to some big meat-claws at the end of your arms. The name of the game is consistency, not speed. Commit to a training routine and start doing it consistently, without taking a day off because you just don't feel like it. Have patience and work for stronger wrists.
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Do curls with a straight bar and a fat bar. Bicep curls obviously target the biceps, primarily, but you can also use curls as a chance to strengthen your forearms as well. Basic bicep curls require you to keep your wrists straight, which helps to build strength while you're doing the exercise, but you can also mix it up and do some wrist curls with both the fat bar and the straight bar to increase hand strength and wrist strength.
- Grip the bar over hand, with less weight than you'd use for a bicep curl. At the curl station, instead of bringing the bar all the way up as you would in a bicep curl, flex your wrists to bring the bar up. Do the same number of sets and reps you use for bicep curls. Repeat the exercise with an under-hand grip as well.
EXPERT TIPFitness TrainerLaila Ajani is a Fitness Trainer and founder of Push Personal Fitness, a personal training organization based in the San Francisco Bay Area. With over 13 years as a trainer and exercise specialist, Laila has expertise in competitive athletics (gymnastics, powerlifting, and tennis), personal training, distance running, and Olympic lifting. Laila is certified by the National Strength & Conditioning Association (NSCA), and USA Powerlifting (USAPL), and she is a Corrective Exercise Specialist (CES).Keep in mind that you need to work the muscles around your wrist, rather than the joint itself. You can't actually strengthen a joint, however, the bones of the joint become denser and you can certainly strengthen the muscles around it. For instance, try holding a 5-7 pound dumbbell with your palm facing downward, then lift your wrist 20-50 times. For a variation, have your palms facing upward, then move your wrist.
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Do plate pinches. Plate pinches are one of the most common forearm strength training exercises, commonly used by bodybuilders to bulk up the forearms and the grip. It couldn't be an easier exercise, provided you've got some heavy stuff to lift. [2] X Research source
- Line up one or two plates from the weight machine on the ground, perpendicular with the ground. Squat down, gripping them with your hands, then stand up, holding it securely. That's it. Alternate hands, doing three sets of five-ten reps, or whatever is comfortable for you.
- You could also use a stack of a few heavy books, something that will stretch out your grip and force you to spread your fingers relatively wide as you lift. It's mostly about the strength required to grip the objects together.
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Do wrist rollers. Wrist rollers require a special device called a wrist roller, but this is commonly available at most gyms, and you could also bootleg one in a pinch. The exercise itself is simple, but challenging, extremely effective at building forearm strength and bigger wrists. A wrist roller bar is basically a short bar with a rope in the center, from which a weight hangs. If you don't have one, you could also use a bar from a barbell, hanging one of the weights from it with a length of rope, about 24 inches (61.0 cm) long. [3] X Research source
- Grip the bar with both hands, palms facing down and extend your arms straight out in front of you. As the weight hangs, twist the bar up and backward with your wrists, one at a time, as if you were activating the gas on a motorcycle. Try 10 or 15 reps at three sets.
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Do knuckle push-ups. If you want to work on stability and strength in your forearms, doing push-ups is a great way of exercising. Traditional, flat-handed pushups, though, can actually stress your wrists, causing soreness and stiffness in the joint. Instead, use push-ups as an opportunity to build strength in your wrists by doing them on your knuckles instead of your flat palms.
- Focus on keeping your wrists very straight and solid while you do push-ups, however many you're comfortable doing. If you're just getting started, try doing three sets of ten.
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Avoid the use of wrist straps. Lots of beginners who are trying to build strength in their forearms over-use wrist-straps, which is counter-productive. Your wrists won’t get stronger if you’re relying on wrist-straps to bear some of the burden of the weight. If you feel like you need wrist-straps, lower the weight you’re lifting. [4] X Research source
Sample Stretches and Exercises
Expert Q&A
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QuestionCan you increase the size of your hand?Michele Dolan is a Fitness Trainer based in Sidney, British Columbia. She has been a personal trainer and fitness instructor since 2002, and was certified as a Personal Trainer by the British Columbia Recreation and Parks Association (BCRPA). Michele is also a Registered Clinical Counselor, and uses her 20+ years of fitness coaching experience to help clients understand their mind-body connection. She is a Registered Clinical Counsellor (RCC) and Certified Clinical Counsellor (CCC), certified by the British Columbia Association of Clinical Counsellors and the Canadian Counselling and Psychotherapy Association. In her work, Michele uses the tools of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Dialectic Behavior Therapy and Cognitive Processing Therapy for Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome. She practices and teaches mindfulness and acceptance in all of her coaching work. She holds a Master’s Degree in Counselling Psychology.Yes and no. You can make your hand muscles bigger and thicker, but you can't change the basic bone structure of the hand.
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QuestionHow do you build your wrists up?Michele Dolan is a Fitness Trainer based in Sidney, British Columbia. She has been a personal trainer and fitness instructor since 2002, and was certified as a Personal Trainer by the British Columbia Recreation and Parks Association (BCRPA). Michele is also a Registered Clinical Counselor, and uses her 20+ years of fitness coaching experience to help clients understand their mind-body connection. She is a Registered Clinical Counsellor (RCC) and Certified Clinical Counsellor (CCC), certified by the British Columbia Association of Clinical Counsellors and the Canadian Counselling and Psychotherapy Association. In her work, Michele uses the tools of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Dialectic Behavior Therapy and Cognitive Processing Therapy for Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome. She practices and teaches mindfulness and acceptance in all of her coaching work. She holds a Master’s Degree in Counselling Psychology.Train the muscles in your forearms twice a week for 10 minutes each time. Try the dumbbell carry or wrist curl-ups. It will take 6-10 weeks to see results, so try to be patient and persevere.
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QuestionI am a young woman with very thin hands. What can I do to quickly increase my wrist size?Michele Dolan is a Fitness Trainer based in Sidney, British Columbia. She has been a personal trainer and fitness instructor since 2002, and was certified as a Personal Trainer by the British Columbia Recreation and Parks Association (BCRPA). Michele is also a Registered Clinical Counselor, and uses her 20+ years of fitness coaching experience to help clients understand their mind-body connection. She is a Registered Clinical Counsellor (RCC) and Certified Clinical Counsellor (CCC), certified by the British Columbia Association of Clinical Counsellors and the Canadian Counselling and Psychotherapy Association. In her work, Michele uses the tools of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Dialectic Behavior Therapy and Cognitive Processing Therapy for Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome. She practices and teaches mindfulness and acceptance in all of her coaching work. She holds a Master’s Degree in Counselling Psychology.You cannot build the size of your wrist, since it is bone and ligament. Try the above listed exercises to strengthen the forearms, and practice pouring water out of a heavy jug on both hands. Wringing out wet clothing or winding rope onto a spool also works these muscles.
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Tips
- Size change will not be overly successful, as you are limited by your frame size.Thanks
Tips from our Readers
- Lie down on your stomach and grasp the legs of a light chair. Slowly lift the chair upward and hold it. Repeat this exercise 10-15 times.
References
- ↑ http://breakingmuscle.com/mobility-recovery/3-drills-for-building-wrist-flexibility
- ↑ http://www.bodybuilding.com/exercises/detail/view/name/plate-pinch
- ↑ http://www.bodybuilding.com/exercises/detail/view/name/wrist-roller
- ↑ http://www.muscleandfitness.com/workouts/arms-exercises/stronger-60-seconds-wrists-and-forearms
- Videos provided by Calisthenicmovement
About This Article
While you can’t make the bones in your wrist larger, you can get stronger and thicker wrists through exercise. Practice wrist extensions by holding a small weight in your hand while your arm is resting on a table. Slowly raise and lower the weight by moving only your wrist. You can also strengthen your wrists through radial training. Stand with your arms at your sides, holding a dumbbell in one hand, then tilt the dumbbell towards the ceiling and slowly lower it down. Do 2 sets of 10-15 reps of each of these exercises 4-5 times a week. Keep reading if you want to learn other stretches and exercises from our Personal Trainer co-author!
Reader Success Stories
- "It gave me a better solution. I tried it for couple of months, and I can feel the change in my wrists. They feel to be much stronger and thicker than before. Thank you." ..." more