Top 10 Ways to Improve Your Pull Ups


sergio oliva chins 1 Top 10 Ways to Improve Your Pull UpsThe pull up is one of the greatest muscle building exercises in existence, which is precisely why it’s been called the upper body squat.

If you’re a man and you suck at them people will laugh at you.

Lat pulldowns can’t even come close to comparing. Whenever you move your body through space the level of neuromuscular activation is dramatically higher.

People all too often ask, “How much can ya bench?”

A more appropriate question would be “How many pull ups can you do?”

The pull up measures your strength to weight ratio better than almost any other exercise known to man.

Don’t Be the Guy Who Can’t Do Pull Ups

To this day I am still haunted by the image I witnessed in a local park a few years ago when I was there training. A man in his mid 30′s was there with his wife and son.

He was shooting some hoops, watching his kid play, and basically just enjoying the beautiful July weather.

At one point he wandered over to the pull up bar and got on it. He then proceeded to twist and squirm and strain for the next 10-15 seconds as he attempted and failed to do one pull up.

ONE PULL UP! Now mind you, this guy was not obese. He probably weighed around 170 pounds.

The second hand embarrassment was enough to make me want to dig a hole and jump in it.

“Look at the man you married, honey. I can’t do a single pull up.”

“Hey buddy, watch how strong daddy is. Don’t you want to grow up to be just like me?”

A real man can do pull ups. It’s as simple as that.

Below are the top 10 ways to improve your pull ups.

1) Don’t go to Failure

This is the biggest mistake you can make with pull ups.

As soon as a single rep does not look exactly like the previous one and you can’t get as high, the set is over.

If your speed slows down noticeably the set is over.

You would never continue a set of squats if you could no longer lock out the weight. If you got all the way up on rep five but were only able to get up ¾ of the way on rep six you wouldn’t proceed to do four more reps of partials until the set ended with the weight crashing down on you and crippling you.

But that’s exactly how people finish their sets of pull ups. The form gets worse and worse and worse, and they keep going and going and going, climbing up the invisible ladder, swinging and kipping.

When you do this you get no stronger. And most of the time you get weaker. The negative effect of training to failureis seen more on chin ups than any other exercise. No one knows why this is, but trust me, that’s how it is.

2) Lose Excess Body Fat

If you are carrying excess body fat your ability to do pull ups will be greatly reduced. Extra body fat is good for lifting more weight in certain exercises that require greater leverage like the squat and deadlift. But that’s all it’s good for. Other than that it’s unhealthy and unsightly.

3) Start in the Proper Position

All too often people start in the dead hang position with their scapula elevated and their shoulders touching their ears. This is dangerous and incorrect.

When you do this all of the tension is placed on your tendons and ligaments instead of your muscles.

When you get on the bar you want to pull your shoulder blades down and lock your shoulders into their sockets. This is a far safer position and ensures that the stress will be placed directly on the muscles and not the tendons and ligaments.

4) Maintain a Slight Elbow Bend Throughout the Set

This goes hand in hand with the above tip. Before starting your set you want to bend your elbows ever so slightly.

This bend should barely be noticeable, but it will have a huge impact on your elbow health.

Do not start with your elbows completely locked. This, again, places all of the stress on the tendons and ligaments instead of on the muscles. On each successive rep you should lower yourself until your arms are nearly straight, stopping just shy of lockout.

But don’t use this as an excuse to cheat. Just shy of lockout means that your elbows are “99% locked out;” you just don’t want that complete extension.

5) Initiate With the Lats

When you start to pull, be sure that you fire your lats first; not your biceps. If you have trouble feeling your lats, as many newbies do, have someone poke or slap your lats a few times before you start pulling. Even having a partner keep his hands in contact with your lats throughout the set may help. It may also look a little strange to other members of your gym.

6) Drive Your Elbows Down

To get the most out of your lats when you chin you should think about driving your elbows down and back. Don’t simply pull with your biceps.

7) Pull Your Chin Over the Bar

I used to be a stickler for having people pull their chest to the bar. I still instruct beginners to do that, knowing full well that they won’t be able to, but that it will at least instill the importance of getting high.

You really only need your chin to clear the bar. That last few inches does very little for you lats and instead focuses the stress on the smaller, weaker muscles of your upper/middle back.

The pull up should be used to target the lats, first and foremost. Don’t waste energy struggling with that last few inches at the top. Get your chin over while keeping your back arched and then lower yourself.

Use other rowing exercises to target those smaller upper back muscles and use the pul up to smoke your lats completely.

8) Use a Variety of Grips

There are countless ways to pull your body up. You can do chin ups with your palms facing you at a number of different grip widths.

You can also do chin ups with your palms facing each other, or pull ups with your palms facing away at multiple grip widths.  You can pull up on bars, rings, Fat Gripz, ropes, towels, suspension straps, beams, Eagle Loops, and even baseballs or softballs hanging from a chain.

The variations are endless. Use as many different chin ups as possible to avoid burnout or overuse injuries.

9) Use a Variety of Rep Ranges

To do a lot of pull ups you need strength and you need endurance.

Strength is built with low reps. You can do low reps with a weighted vest or dip belt or you can simply perform more difficult variations of pull ups.

Endurance is built with high reps. This is where the use of bands comes in handy.

Having a few different levels of band tension will allow you to vary your rep range greatly. This will help you boost your chin up numbers a lot faster.

Some days you train in the range of 3-6 reps for maximal strength. Some day you train in the range of 7-12, and others you train in the range of 15-30, with a band, to improve your endurance.

10) Strengthen Your Grip

The stronger your grip is the easier pull ups will feel. I suggest getting a Captains of Crush Gripper and using it a few times per week. You can also add in some more specific grip work at the gym like fat bar holds, hexagon dumbbell holds, as well as various pinching and crushing exercises. I highly recommend investing in a pair of Fat Gripz and using them for a large majority of your exercises.

Start using these top 10 ways to improve your pull ups today and drop me a line to let me know how they’re working out for you.

In the meantime if you could hit the Like button I’d really appreciate it.

Kavadlo Raising the Bar Cover e1334286979461 Top 10 Ways to Improve Your Pull UpsPS. Wanna take your pull ups to the next level?

Then you need to check out Al Kavadlo’s awesome book, Raising the Bar.

You’ve seen the incredible masters of the pull up bar on Youtube.

Now Al takes you to the very New York City parks where it all goes down and teaches how you too can become a master of the bar.

In addition to pull ups Al also covers handstands, dips, l-sits, muscle ups and numerous other bad ass bodyweight exercises.

Click HERE to check it out now.

pin it button Top 10 Ways to Improve Your Pull Ups
Workouts and Coaching from Jason

96 Comments so far


  1. Matthew
    14. Jun, 2012
    at 7:51 am
    #


    A nice way to improve grip strength is (I find) to place a towel over a bar so it hangs down on both sides… then just hold it while hanging there. Epic for grip


  2. Kevin
    14. Jun, 2012
    at 10:24 am
    #


    Hey Jay…I’m still stuck at about 5 to 7 reps till my form breaks down with the middle band..I tried doing pull ups every day like till recommended but felt constantly sore and my lifts and regular three workout days were impacted..What are ladders…What do you recommend for me..again I have three assisted chin up bands . What type of set and rep scheme should I do for the ladders and how many days per week and when…..pleease help …I. am so pull up challenged


    • Tim
      18. Jun, 2012
      at 4:02 pm
      #


      Hey, for improving the number of pullups, I recommend negatives. Also, these things take time. I needed a year and a half to get to 17 from 2 or 3, doing them nearly everyday. I also eschewed all other upper body exercises and just swam. Having a buddy(s) to compete with also helps.


      • Ron
        26. May, 2013
        at 3:51 am
        #


        Hey, i am not very good at pull ups, but i had a similar story to yours – i was very bad in pull ups – could do like 5 of them. However – i was intensively training and managed to achieve 28 reps per/set after 2 months – which is a lot faster than you mentioned in your comment. Just to tell you the way i trained – first of all, my workout always happened in same time of a day – like 9 a.m. before breakfast, i only drank water before exercising. As i was working out about 5 straight days – identical time for a workout worked great to give my muscles maximum time to rest.
        Very beginning of training pull ups: as i could do 5 – i did a lot of sets with a low number of pull ups – about 7 sets – starting from that maximum 5 then /4/4/3/3//3 – i was pushing myself to do as much as i can.
        The result was like this – i could increase number of pull-ups per set at least once per week. After a week i shiften to numbers similar to 8/8/7/6/5/5/5 (number of keeps similar all the time – 4-6 sets).
        Additional and very important feature – every week or week and half – i was checking what is my limit of pull ups, meaning trying to do maximum of them during the first set. The result was giving me recommendations of how much pull ups per set i should do in the following week. I.e. if i made 20 pullups as my maximum – i would do 15/13/10/10/8 or similar to that (meaning i already did 20 of them a minute before) and for a remainin week i would do (20/15/13/10/10/8). After a week – i do maximum again – and hange my numbers and sets.
        As a result – after monts – my maximum was 28 pull-ups.


  3. Ian
    18. Jun, 2012
    at 12:45 am
    #


    The most chin ups I have ever done is 10 and sadly right now at the end of a weights workout 4 or 5 is about all I can do. I have been doing 2 sets per workout. One with weight and one without. I have been doing bent over dumbbell rows and lat pull downs in an effort to strengthen my chin ups but so far it has not helped.

    Thank you for the tips and I hope they help.


  4. AustinB
    22. Jun, 2012
    at 1:35 pm
    #


    How do i do ladders?


  5. erez
    02. Jul, 2012
    at 11:09 am
    #


    Good and proper manual. thank you.
    i wiil take more care of my ligements when doing the first pull up now.

    can you please include some of the more complex varations of pull ups. i have been stuck on 15 for quite a while now.


  6. Boots
    12. Jul, 2012
    at 2:04 pm
    #


    Will try these tips out been boxing for a while but still struggle to manage more than 3/4 chin ups !


  7. gerry andrews
    14. Jul, 2012
    at 3:15 pm
    #


    hi there jason ive just started doing pull ups and dips and inverted rows in a new trainig session ive found these to be awsome have only started doing low reps like 4 reps of 3 sets for the pull ups different varieations and 8 inverted rows reps of 3 sets and ten reps of 3 sets for dips which would you recamend i use for my stomach im not looking abs just to trimm down my stomach many thanks gerry andrews newry


  8. Karim
    01. Aug, 2012
    at 2:23 pm
    #


    I first fell in love with the pull up as a child while training in gymnastics and it is still a major part of my and all my clients workouts.


  9. brad
    04. Aug, 2012
    at 5:54 am
    #


    i have been doing pull-ups for years, but last month i must have hurt a muscle near my shoulder blade (left)…it feels like a pinched nerve as my neck, and shoulder is affected too, along with my back…i tried to work out again, but the pain came back. any ideas how long this takes to heal, and what i actually did to myself?


    • guest
      12. Oct, 2012
      at 1:04 pm
      #


      Dude, not sure if you figured it out or not but it sounds like you have rotator cuff tendonitis!


    • Alfie williams
      12. Mar, 2013
      at 8:51 am
      #


      Never start your pull up static and dangling. This puts stress on your tendons and neck. Begin your pull up approximately three quarters of the way up as this puts the stress on your muscles. I am only 15 but have witnessed the same problem.


  10. Jason Thorpe
    31. Aug, 2012
    at 11:28 am
    #


    That first piece of advice about not going to failure was new to me, but then again I’ve always sucked at pull ups. Maybe I’ve finally found the key to build some reps – will report back, thanks!


  11. izzo
    02. Sep, 2012
    at 9:03 am
    #


    hate to be that guy, but you the author of this post comes off as rude and snobby, and these aren’t really tips on how to improve pull ups but on how to do them correctly.


  12. Nick
    14. Sep, 2012
    at 6:18 am
    #


    I’m joining the Marines and my PFT requires a certain number of pullups. My recruiter told me it is from a dead hang position that I’ll have to start, will that affect my number of reps that much? Also, I’ve been doing things like bicep curls and just free lifting dumbells to strengthen my biceps, do you think this will help much?


  13. Joe
    29. Sep, 2012
    at 2:23 pm
    #


    Good tips, particularly the elbow/tendon saving suggestions.

    Perhaps the terminology is mainly to get this post read and to slap some of us into pull-up action, but making pull-up prowess equivalent to manhood overlooks that different bodies are primed to do different things.

    I, for one, would not call Shaq O’Neil unmanly even though — given his length of arms and weight — he probably can not pump out multiple pull-ups.

    Yep.

    -Joe


  14. chin up monkey
    09. Oct, 2012
    at 7:39 am
    #


    LMAO at this” If you suck at them people will laugh at you and your manhood will always be questioned.”


  15. dan
    31. Oct, 2012
    at 6:50 am
    #


    ehy guy i need a way to improve my improve my pull up im a 20 yeras old and wiegh 83 kg i need some help to improve them at the moment i doing between 4 and 5


  16. Jason Smith
    08. Dec, 2012
    at 1:13 pm
    #


    Hey Jason, I can do a max of 16 strict pulls, 25 kipping pull up and I’m using a dip belt with various kettle bell when I’m training strength. but I really would love to do a one arm pull up (I only ever met one young man who could, he was an Israeli commando) do you have any tips on training myself to being able to do this?
    thanks Jason


  17. tofique
    14. Dec, 2012
    at 1:06 pm
    #


    is this pull ups increase our height


  18. abdallah
    11. Jan, 2013
    at 12:30 pm
    #


    i can do 15 pull ups and im 13 years old! im gonna try these ways next time i train


  19. dylan
    23. Jan, 2013
    at 3:41 pm
    #


    What do you suggest for condyle & stress in the anconeus and flexors. mine are fvcked :( Have adjusted my grip to hang [not grip hard], doing grip rotation, bicep, over grip, and under, still jacked. Im just got Voodoo compression/tack bands to help dont care if I look stupid but even picking up random stuff up hurts now…. any suggestions mang?

    havent seen you for a minute hope youre good brutha


  20. Phillip
    22. Mar, 2013
    at 10:11 am
    #


    I can only do 12 what reps should i do for my sets?


  21. Wyatt
    26. Mar, 2013
    at 11:54 am
    #


    I am a Poolee for the united states Marine Core this website was very informative for me and my squad dead arm hang chin ups are an everyday occurrence for our PT I can do 21 pull ups there’s much work to do.


  22. Nick
    02. Apr, 2013
    at 8:32 am
    #


    Hey guys…I can’t even do a single pull up. its not because i lack strength…actually i never tried these…and now i can’t do a single…iam 22 yrs old…6’2 and i weigh 190 pounds…any help would be appreciated…


    • dylan
      02. Apr, 2013
      at 8:34 pm
      #


      Organize your scapular complex into retraction. Overhang your grip. Also use a elasto band to get the motor and muscle recruitment on point at first till you can go unassisted. Pull to the chest and keep your jaw loose which relaxs the neck.
      Im 220 and 6’2″ and started doing them 4 months ago and now do 100 nite [in reps of 5-10] shvt will get you wide!! GL buddy


  23. Brendan
    27. May, 2013
    at 6:15 pm
    #


    Hey guys Im 14 and i can do 18 pull ups, i go almost all the way down also. I will try and use these techniques. Thanks!

Comment Rules:

The primary comment rule we have is that you keep it cool. You can be critical, but rude or disrespectful comments will be deleted. Also, please use your REAL NAME (initials or even a nickname your friends would call you are okay too), not your business name, and don’t post your website address in the comment text. That’s considered spam, which is completely lame.


So join in on the conversation and let me know what you think. I read every single comment and look forward to hearing from you!

x
Stop Wasting Time
article pic

Gain More Size & Strength, Waste Less Time in the Gym