Neutral-Grip Lat Pulldown
The neutral-grip lat pulldown keeps the shoulders in a comfortable position while emphasizing the lats and mid-back. Parallel handles reduce elbow and wrist stress and make it easier to keep the pull in front of the body with elbows driving down.
Muscles Worked
Primary Muscles
- Latissimus Dorsi
Secondary Muscles
- Teres Major
- Rhomboids
- Rear Delts
- Biceps
How to Perform
- 1
Set-up: Adjust the seat so thighs are locked under pads and grasp the neutral handles.
- 2
Brace: Lift the chest, keep ribs down, and set shoulders slightly back and down with neutral wrists.
- 3
Pull: Drive elbows down and back, bringing the handles toward the upper chest.
- 4
Squeeze: Pause and contract the lats without leaning far back.
- 5
Return: Control the handles upward to a full stretch.
Common Mistakes
Pulling Behind the Neck
Increases shoulder stress. Keep the pull to the upper chest.
Excessive Lean
Turning it into a row reduces lat focus. Stay tall.
Half Range
Short pulls reduce stretch and growth stimulus.
Shrugging
Letting shoulders rise steals tension from the lats.
Training Notes
Neutral-Grip Lat Pulldown works best when the torso stays quiet and the shoulder blades do the initial movement. Set the chest up, keep ribs down, and drive the elbows toward the hips or back pockets. If your neck tenses up, reset with a longer spine and keep the gaze neutral.
Think about squeezing the mid‑back at the end of each rep rather than yanking the handle. A 1–2 second pause in the contracted position teaches control and builds thickness. On the way back, let the shoulder blades glide forward for a full stretch without losing posture.
For growth, 3–4 sets of 8–15 reps with a controlled eccentric works well. For strength, use heavier loads in the 5–8 rep range and longer rests. Straps are fine if grip limits the back; just keep the pull strict and avoid shrugging.
If you feel it more in the biceps than the back, slightly reduce the grip strength and think “elbows first.” A neutral wrist and a relaxed grip can help the lats engage. Adjust the handle height or torso angle to keep the line of pull aligned with the target fibers.
Protect the lower back by keeping the core braced and the chest supported whenever possible. If you use free weights, avoid jerking with the hips. A smooth eccentric builds more tissue and keeps the shoulder joint happy over the long term.
Pair Neutral-Grip Lat Pulldown with a vertical pull on the same day to cover the full back. For example, do a row‑dominant movement first, then a pulldown or pull‑up. Keep total weekly volume for back around 12–20 quality sets, adjusted to recovery.
A slightly wider grip typically emphasizes upper‑back thickness, while a closer grip shifts more load to the lats. Test both and keep the one that lets you feel the target area most. The best grip is usually the one that allows a smooth, pain‑free path.
Use a light warm‑up set to find the right shoulder position, then lock that in for your working sets. If the lower back tires before the upper back, reduce load and add a chest‑supported variation for a few weeks.
A strong back grows from consistent volume and strict reps. Add small progressions—one extra rep or a slight load increase—while keeping the same tempo. The best back work feels stable, not chaotic.
If elbow or shoulder irritation appears, rotate the angle or handle rather than stopping all pulling. Small changes in grip or machine setup often solve the problem while keeping training consistent.
Pro Tips
Think Elbows
Drive elbows down, not hands backward.
Tempo Control
2–3 seconds on the way up maintains tension.
Use Straps if Needed
Helps lats over grip when volume is high.
Mix Grips
Rotate grips weekly to avoid overuse.
Variations
Single-Arm Neutral Pulldown
Unilateral control and core stability.
Close Neutral Grip
More lower-lat emphasis.
Slow Eccentric
Extra time under tension.
Isometric Holds
Pause 2–3 seconds at the bottom.
Alternatives
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