Brachialis

Time To Read

2–3 minutes

Date Last Modified

Brachialis

The brachialis is one of those “quiet hero” muscles of the arm. It is less famous than the biceps but absolutely essential for flexing your elbow.

It sits deep to the biceps brachii, almost like its sturdy little bodyguard. The biceps gets all the credit (and the flexing poses). However, the brachialis actually does most of the heavy lifting when it comes to bending the elbow. That’s because it attaches from the anterior surface of the humerus. This is about halfway down the shaft. It inserts onto the ulnar tuberosity and coronoid process of the ulna. Unlike the biceps, which crosses the shoulder and also attaches to the radius, the brachialis is different. Its focus is strictly humerus to ulna.

Functionally, this makes the brachialis a pure elbow flexor. It doesn’t care whether your hand is supinated (palm up) or pronated (palm down)—it just flexes the elbow. That’s why it’s often called the “workhorse” of elbow flexion. The next time you’re hauling groceries, doing a pull-up, or just bringing food to your mouth, thank your brachialis. It does the grunt work while your biceps takes the spotlight.

Brachialis muscle anatomy model, arm flexed, with arrow pointing to the muscle.
Brachialis muscle anatomy model, arm flexed, with arrow pointing to the muscle.
Photography, text, and labels by Rob Swatski, Assistant Professor of Biology, Harrisburg Area Community College – York Campus, York, PA.

Brachialis Origin

The brachialis muscle originates from the anterior surface of the humerus, specifically the distal half of the humerus. It arises along the entire length of the humerus. It starts just below the deltoid muscle’s insertion and extends down to the level of the elbow joint.

Brachialis Insertion

The brachialis muscle inserts onto the ulna, a bone in the forearm. More specifically, it attaches to the ulnar tuberosity and the coronoid process of the ulna. This attachment provides stability and support to the elbow joint.

Brachialis Actions

Stabilization of the Elbow Joint

Support for the Biceps Brachii

Interactive Materials

Use this 3D Viewer to Explore the Muscles of the Upper Body

“Open3DModel – Upper limb – English labels” by Open3D project, Jan Kooloos, RadboudUMC, Eungyeol Lee, LUMC et al, license: CC BY-SA

List of terms