Pull-up & Chin-up Guide | How to do Pull-ups & Chin-ups
Apr 21st, 2010 - written by Stephan in Strength Training
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Without doubt, pull-ups and chin-ups are one of the most effective basic exercises to develop a muscular upper body. They work a large number of muscles simultaneously and, through different grip setups and techniques, offer many different training variations.

Pull-up Benefits
Strength | Pull-ups are a great exercise to strengthen almost all upper body and arm muscles, including the hand's gripping strength. |
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Muscles | Doing Pull-ups on a regular basis can develop an impressive upper body. |
Balance | Pull-ups help maintaining the upper body's muscular balance by compensating the popular pressing exercise for chest and front shoulders. |
Simplicity | Pull-ups require nothing but a fixed horizontal bar or something similar to grasp. Once you're able to perform a few pull-ups, you can train virtually anywhere. |
Versatility | A variety of grip setups and many training techniques make pull-ups a versatile and interesting exercise. |
Basic Pull-up Instructions
- Stand below pull-up bar and grasp it with wide overhand grip. Hang on bar.
- Bend your knees and cross your lower legs.
- Pull your body up until your upper chest reaches the bar. Look up and keep chest up, leading toward the bar.
- Return with same speed. Keep the arms very slightly bent at the bottom of the motion to maintain the muscular activity. Simultaneously let your your shoulders be pulled up by the bodyweight.
- Repeat.
The Difference Between Pull-ups and Chin-ups
While the basic pulling movement is the same, pull-ups and chin-ups differ in the hand's grip setup.Pull-ups | Chin-ups |
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Palms facing away from you involves less arm flexor muscles and more back. It is harder. | Palms facing you involves less back muscles and more arm flexors. It is easier. |
Pull-up Techniques
Especially for beginners pull-ups a are a major challenge. Not only do they require a good relation of strength and bodyweight, but also a very specific muscular coordination that can only be improved by doing it.Don't stick to Lat Pull-downs for too long. Even if you're strong enough to sit and pull down about your bodyweight, it doesn't mean you're able to do a single correct pull-up, because you're not accustomed to the specific technique. Any great performance on the pull-up bar comes from hard and consistent training.
Beginner's Techniques
Lat Pull-downs | ![]() |
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Assisted Pull-ups, Machine | ![]() |
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Assisted Pull-ups, Elastic Band | ![]() |
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Assisted Pull-ups, Training Partner | ![]() |
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Negative Pull-ups | ![]() |
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Partial Repetitions | ![]() |
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Advanced Techniques
Weighted Pull-ups | ![]() |
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Slow Negatives | ![]() |
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Pull-up Variations
Wide Overhand Grip | ![]() |
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Close Overhand Grip | ![]() |
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Neutral Grip | ![]() |
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Close Neutral Grip | ![]() |
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Reverse Grip | ![]() |
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Wide Reverse Grip | ![]() |
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Mixed Grip | ![]() |
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One Arm Reverse Grip | ![]() |
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Common Mistakes
- Straight Arms. Extending the arms completely disables all major muscular activity for a moment, which may result in overstressed passive structures, such as tendons and ligaments.
- Swinging. Try to keep hips and legs as stable as possible. Don't kick legs and don't swing back and forth.
Exercise Guide Links to Pull-ups & Chin-ups
Pull-upPull-up, Assisted
Pull-up, Behind Neck
Pull-up, Close Grip
[linkexercise]bodyweight_v_grip_pull_up[/linkexercise]
Chin-up

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