Rhomboids (Major & Minor)

X-ray style illustration highlighting the rhomboids (major and minor) between the thoracic spine and the medial border of the scapula, supporting scapular retraction and shoulder blade stability.

Rhomboideus major & Rhomboideus minor

Upper back muscles running between the thoracic spine and the inner border of the shoulder blade (scapula).

Bring the scapula back and keep it stable so the shoulder stays strong and efficient.

  • Climbing
  • Rowing
  • Swimming (scapular control)
  • Combat sports (pulling, clinch, grappling)
  • Gymnastics / calisthenics (pull-ups, hanging work)
  • Strength training (rows, pull-ups: scapular stability)
  • Spinous processes (bony bumps) of the upper-to-mid thoracic spine (commonly described around T2–T5 for minor and T2–T7 for major, depending on anatomy references).
  • Medial border of the scapula (inner edge), with minor higher and major more inferior.
  • Dorsal scapular nerve (often C5, sometimes with C4 contribution)
    • A nerve mainly dedicated to muscles that control scapular position.
  • These are “control” muscles: they don’t just move the arm—they position the scapula so the shoulder can work cleanly.
  • They often share the workload with the middle/lower trapezius: similar area, complementary roles.
  • Their efficiency depends a lot on thoracic mobility (a stiff upper back limits scapular freedom).
  • Scapular retraction (pull the shoulder blade toward the spine)
  • Downward rotation of the scapula (helps orient the scapula “down”)
  • Scapular stabilization against the ribcage (a “set/anchored” shoulder blade)
  • Middle and lower trapezius
  • Latissimus dorsi (coordination during pulling patterns)
  • Rotator cuff (shoulder stability)
  • Spinal erectors (thoracic posture support)
  • Serratus anterior (in protraction and upward-rotation patterns)
  • Pectoralis minor (tends to pull the scapula forward and down)
  • Pectorals (can promote forward-shoulder posture when dominant)
  • Helps prevent a “rounded shoulders” posture (shoulders drifting forward)
  • Keeps the scapula stable during carries, hangs, pulling work, and repeated arm movements
  • Pulling becomes “arm-driven” (biceps/forearms take over) and the shoulders tend to rise.
  • The scapula doesn’t “lock in”: pulling may feel unstable or uncomfortable at the front of the shoulder.
  • A “stiff” feeling between the shoulder blades, difficulty letting the scapula glide naturally.
  • A tendency to brace the ribcage (less smooth breathing if posture becomes rigid).
  • If the chest collapses (thoracic flexion), rhomboids lose leverage and the body often shifts to upper traps and neck tension.
  • Goal: check if scapular retraction happens through the mid-back without shrugging.
  • Setup:
    • Lie face down (bench or floor), forehead resting on a towel.
    • Arms in a T position (about 90°), thumbs pointing up.
    • Small, controlled reps: gently pull the shoulder blades back, then slowly release.
  • What to watch:
    • Tension felt between the scapula and spine, not in the neck.
    • Shoulders stay away from the ears.
  • Interpretation:
    • ➡️ Neck takes over / shoulders rise → upper-trap dominance, weak scapular control.
    • ➡️ Mostly rear-shoulder sensation → rear deltoid strategy, scapula not truly controlled.
  • Goal: test scapular control and endurance during a simple pulling pattern.
  • Setup:
    • Seated band row (neutral grip), tall posture, chest “open.”
    • Slow tempo: 2 sec pull – 2 sec hold – 3 sec return.
    • 8–12 clean reps.
  • What to watch:
    • Stable hold: scapula stays back without arching the low back and without shrugging.
  • Interpretation:
    • ➡️ Scapula “slides forward” on the return → poor control under load.
    • ➡️ Can’t hold 2 seconds without shaking → insufficient endurance (rhomboids + mid-trap system).
  • Goal: identify what takes over: low back, upper traps, or arms.
  • Setup:
    • Very light chest-supported row or one-arm row.
    • Cue: “scapula first, elbow second.”
  • What to watch:
    • A small scapular movement (retraction) happens before elbow flexion.
  • Interpretation:
    • ➡️ Elbow moves first + forearms burn → arm dominance.
    • ➡️ Shoulders rise → upper-trap dominance.
    • ➡️ Low back arches to “finish the rep” → lumbar compensation.
  • Simple fix:
    • Reduce range of motion.
    • Add a 2-second pause at the end of the pull.
    • Lower resistance until mid-back control is clear.
  • Prone T hold (10–20 sec holds, calm breathing, no shrugging)
  • Band row with a pause (2 sec squeeze, controlled return)
  • Short-range scapular retraction (cable or band, tiny range, scapula-focused)
  • Horizontal rows (cable, dumbbells, barbell) with controlled tempo
  • Pull-ups / vertical pulls (keep the scapula “set” rather than shrugged)
  • Farmer carry (tall posture, shoulders down, stable scapula—not rigid)
  • Rounded shoulders: rhomboids lengthened and under-recruited, pecs dominant
  • Upper-trap dominance: “high shoulders,” neck tension
  • Limited thoracic mobility: scapula movement becomes restricted and pulling quality drops
  • Discomfort around the scapula, “tight” feeling between scapula and spine
  • Indirect neck fatigue when shoulders habitually rise
  • Shoulder feels less stable during pulling or hanging work when scapular control is poor
  • Pulling work felt mostly in the arms and neck, not mid-back
  • Scapula moves unevenly side-to-side or feels “uncontrolled”
  • Hard to keep an open posture without turning stiff
  • Going too heavy and compensating with:
    • shrugging
    • low-back arching
    • head jutting forward
  • Forcing “shoulder blades together” by crushing the ribcage (rigidity + poor breathing)
  • End-range pulling when scapular control is lost (shoulder drifts forward)
  • Neglecting the controlled return (the eccentric phase), where scapular control often fails first
  • Slow scapular circles
    • Standing, arms relaxed: small circles, smooth and pain-free, 6–8 reps.
  • Controlled thoracic rotation
    • Quadruped: hand behind head, rotate elbow up, 6 reps per side, calm breathing.
  • Wall slides
    • Back to wall, forearms on wall: slide up/down slowly, neck long, comfortable range.