Does resistance training at longer muscle lengths build bigger elbow flexors than training at shorter lengths?

54
Pro
0
Against
Leans yes
Resistance Training Length2 min readUpdated May 26, 2026

What the Evidence Shows

We analyzed the available evidence on whether resistance training at longer muscle lengths builds bigger elbow flexors than training at shorter lengths, and what we’ve found so far is unclear. One assertion claims that exercises stretching the elbow flexors more lead to greater muscle growth in cross-sectional area compared to exercises with less stretch, and this assertion is listed as supported by 54.0 studies and refuted by 54.0 studies [1].

This balance means the evidence does not lean one way or the other. The same number of reports support and challenge the idea, which suggests the findings are inconsistent or possibly based on different methods, populations, or measurements. We cannot say whether stretching the elbow flexors more during exercises like curls leads to bigger muscles, because the data we’ve reviewed does not show a clear pattern.

It’s possible that factors like training volume, intensity, rest periods, or individual differences affect outcomes in ways not captured here. Without more consistent results across studies, we can’t determine if muscle length during training plays a meaningful role in elbow flexor growth.

For now, if you’re training your biceps and triceps, focusing on controlled movements, full ranges of motion, and progressive overload remains a reasonable approach — but we don’t have enough consistent evidence to say that stretching the muscles more during the exercise will make them bigger than training with less stretch.

Evidence from Studies

1
Primary Studies (4)

Update History

Published
May 26, 2026·Last updated May 26, 2026
  • May 26, 2026New topic created from assertion