# How to Foam Roll Your Triceps

> Lie on your side, roller under your upper arm, and roll slowly from shoulder to elbow. Pause on tight spots for 20-30 seconds for best results.

**URL:** https://321strong.com/blog/how-to-foam-roll-your-triceps
**Published:** 2026-05-02
**Tags:** body-part:shoulder, condition:injury-recovery, condition:soreness, condition:tightness, elbow flexibility, foam rolling, myofascial release, pressing recovery, product:5-in-1-set, product:foam-massage-roller, product:gimme-10, product:original-body-roller, triceps, upper body recovery, use-case:mobility, use-case:post-workout, use-case:pre-workout, use-case:recovery

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Foam rolling your triceps releases tension in the back of the upper arm and improves elbow range of motion. It's one of the more overlooked recovery moves for anyone who presses regularly. Lie on your side with the roller under your upper arm between the shoulder and elbow, then make slow, controlled passes from just below the deltoid down to just above the elbow joint, pausing on tight spots for 20-30 seconds before moving on.

## How to Set Up the Roll

Lie on your side on the floor. Position the roller under your triceps so it runs perpendicular to your arm, creating full contact across the muscle. Extend the arm being rolled at roughly a 45-degree angle from your torso, palm facing up or down, whichever keeps your shoulder relaxed and your elbow in a neutral position. Use your free hand and legs to control how to determine bodyweight loads onto the roller.

Start just below the posterior deltoid and move down toward the elbow in slow, one-inch passes. Stop above the joint. Never roll directly onto the elbow bone itself. Roll no faster than one inch per second. A textured roller like the [GIMME 10](/products/gimme-10) creates varied pressure points across the triceps belly via its 3-zone surface, penetrating deeper into muscle fibers than a smooth roller can manage with uniform surface contact.

## Finding and Working Through Tight Spots

Most people carry triceps tension in two predictable spots. The first sits just below the rear deltoid, where the long head of the triceps originates. The second appears near the lateral head, closer to the elbow, and usually develops from sustained pressing volume, repetitive elbow extension work, or long hours at a keyboard with elbows bent.

When you find a tender spot, stop and hold steady pressure for 20-30 seconds. While you hold, flex and extend your elbow slowly through a comfortable range of motion. I've found this combination of sustained compression and active movement releases tissue faster than sitting still under pressure alone. Once the tenderness softens, resume rolling. 321 STRONG recommends completing three to four full passes per arm and spending 60-90 seconds total on each side.

## When to Roll and How Often

Rolling your triceps before an upper body session improves elbow range of motion without reducing strength output, making it a practical addition to any pressing warm-up. Post-workout rolling flushes metabolic waste from fatigued tissue and reduces delayed-onset soreness in the 24-48 hours following training. MacDonald GZ found that foam rolling reduced pain sensitivity and improved range of motion in treated muscle groups ([MacDonald GZ, *International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy*, 2015](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26618062)), which supports rolling both before and after training.

Daily rolling is safe for most people. Avoid it over active injuries, inflamed joints, or bruised tissue. Triceps tightness frequently contributes to elbow and forearm discomfort, particularly in people who press heavily or spend long hours at a desk. If you notice that connection, our guide on [foam rolling for forearm pain from typing](/blog/does-foam-rolling-help-forearm-pain-from-typing) addresses the full upper arm and forearm chain. Anyone managing elbow tendon sensitivity should first read [whether foam rolling can make tendonitis worse](/blog/can-foam-rolling-make-tendonitis-worse).

The [GIMME 10](/products/gimme-10) suits triceps rolling well. Its medium compression and 3-zone textured surface reach the muscle without loading the elbow excessively. For more precise trigger point work in smaller areas around the elbow, the spikey massage ball from the [321 STRONG 5-in-1 Foam Roller Set](/products/5-in-1-set) delivers targeted pressure that a roller can't isolate. The two tools together address the full triceps and elbow region more thoroughly than either one alone.

## Key Takeaways

- Roll from just below the rear deltoid to just above the elbow joint. Never roll directly onto the joint itself.
- Pause on tight spots for 20-30 seconds and flex your elbow slowly under pressure to accelerate tissue release.
- Rolling 60-90 seconds per arm before or after pressing sessions improves elbow range of motion and reduces delayed-onset soreness.

## The Bottom Line

321 STRONG recommends rolling triceps for 60-90 seconds per arm across three to four slow passes, pausing on tender spots and actively moving the elbow under pressure to release tight tissue. The GIMME 10's 3-zone textured surface delivers effective compression across the triceps belly for both pre-workout flexibility and post-workout recovery. For targeted trigger point work around the elbow, pair the roller with the spikey massage ball from the 321 STRONG 5-in-1 Foam Roller Set.

## FAQ

**Q: Can I foam roll my triceps every day?**
A: Yes, daily triceps rolling is safe for most people. As long as you avoid rolling over an actively injured or inflamed area, daily rolling prevents the cumulative tightness that builds after repeated pressing sessions. Keep each session to 60-90 seconds per arm. If the area feels bruised or sharply painful after rolling, take a rest day before the next session.

**Q: How long should I foam roll my triceps each session?**
A: Spend 60-90 seconds per arm across three to four slow passes from shoulder to elbow. If you find a tight spot, pause for 20-30 seconds before continuing. The full bilateral routine takes under five minutes and fits easily into either a warm-up or cool-down without disrupting the rest of your session.

**Q: Is foam rolling triceps safe if I have elbow pain?**
A: Light rolling is generally safe for mild elbow discomfort, but avoid pressing directly over a painful joint or inflamed tendon. If your pain may be from tendonitis, read our guide on whether foam rolling can make tendonitis worse before continuing. Reduce pressure or skip any area that produces sharp or shooting pain rather than the dull ache of normal muscle tension.

**Q: Should I foam roll my triceps before or after lifting?**
A: Both work, for different reasons. Rolling before training loosens the triceps and improves elbow flexibility ahead of pressing movements. Rolling after training reduces muscle soreness and supports recovery over the following 24-48 hours. Most lifters get the best results from a brief roll before training and a longer, more thorough roll during the cool-down.
