Exercises Back Lat Pulldown

Lat Pulldown: Correct Form & Working Weight

Lats primary Lat Pulldown Machine Beginner Compound · Pull

The lat pulldown is a cable machine exercise that mimics the pull-up movement with adjustable weight. It's the most popular back exercise in any gym — perfect for beginners building toward pull-ups and advanced lifters who want higher rep back work.

Front Back
Latsprimary
Biceps, Rear Deltoids, Forearmssecondary

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Lat Pulldown Video Tutorial

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How to Do the Lat Pulldown

  1. Sit at the lat pulldown machine. Adjust the thigh pad so you're secured and can't rise up. Grab the bar with a wide overhand grip.
  2. Lean back slightly — about 10-15 degrees. Pull your chest up and shoulders down. This is the starting position.
  3. Pull the bar down toward your upper chest by driving your elbows down and back. Think about pulling with your back, not your arms.
  4. Bring the bar to your upper chest or just below your chin. Squeeze your lats for a full second at the bottom.
  5. Let the bar return up under control. Fully extend your arms at the top to get a complete lat stretch before the next rep.

Lat Pulldown Mistakes to Avoid

Pulling behind the neck — puts the shoulder in a vulnerable position. Always pull to the front, toward your upper chest.
Leaning too far back — more than 15 degrees turns it into a row. A slight lean is fine, excessive lean uses momentum.
Using arms instead of back — if your biceps burn more than your lats, you're pulling with your arms. Focus on driving elbows down.
Not fully extending at the top — letting the weight stack rest between reps. Reach up and stretch the lats before each pull.

Lat Pulldown Muscles Worked

The lat pulldown primarily targets the latissimus dorsi — the large muscle responsible for back width. The biceps, rear deltoids, and forearms assist the pull. Grip width and type shift emphasis slightly.

Lat Pulldown Alternatives

Pull-UpThe bodyweight version — once you're strong enough, pull-ups are the gold standard
Close-Grip Lat PulldownWant more range of motion and bicep involvement — narrow grip variation
Straight Arm PulldownWant to isolate the lats without bicep involvement
Seated Cable RowWant horizontal pulling for back thickness instead of width

Lat Pulldown Programming

Strength
4 × 6-8
sets × reps
Rest 2 min
Hypertrophy
3 × 8-12
sets × reps
Rest 90 sec
Endurance
3 × 12-15
sets × reps
Rest 60 sec

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Lat Pulldown FAQ

Wide or close grip for lat pulldown?
Wide grip emphasizes the outer lats (width). Close grip allows more range of motion and bicep involvement. Use both — wide as your primary, close as a variation.
How much should I lat pulldown?
If you can pulldown your bodyweight for 8-10 reps, you can likely do pull-ups. Most beginners start at 50-60% of bodyweight.
Can lat pulldowns replace pull-ups?
For muscle activation, they're similar. But pull-ups build more functional strength and core stability. Pulldowns are a stepping stone to pull-ups, not a permanent replacement.
Should I use a straight bar or V-bar?
Straight wide bar for lat width. V-bar or close-grip bar for more range and bicep. Both are effective — the wide bar is the standard starting point.