The cable upright row is the safer, more controlled version of the barbell upright row. With a cable, you can use a wider grip and a lower finish height — the two adjustments that dramatically reduce the shoulder impingement risk associated with the traditional barbell version. The result: a strong delts-and-traps builder that more people can do safely.

This guide covers the rope or wide-grip cable upright row, which is the version most lifters should default to.

What is the cable upright row?

The cable upright row is a cable shoulder exercise performed at a low pulley. You grip a rope or wide-grip bar attachment with both hands, then pull the attachment vertically up the front of the body to about chest height — leading with the elbows, which travel up and outward. The motion combines shoulder abduction with elbow flexion.

The exercise targets the lateral (side) deltoid and the upper trapezius. With a wide grip and a low finish height (sternum, not chin), it stays in a shoulder-friendly position throughout.

Muscles worked

Muscle group Role Contribution
Lateral deltoid Primary mover, shoulder abduction ~40 %
Upper trapezius Scapular elevation ~30 %
Anterior deltoid Shoulder flexion assist ~15 %
Biceps, brachialis Elbow flexion ~10 %
Core, scapular stabilisers Stabilisation ~5 %

The cable upright row is unique in hitting both the lateral deltoid and the upper traps in a single compound-style movement. Compared to isolated lateral raises + shrugs, it’s more time-efficient (one move, two targets) but slightly less effective for either muscle alone.

How to cable upright row: 5 steps

  1. Set up the cable

    Attach a rope or wide-grip bar to the **low pulley**. Stand facing the cable column, about 30 cm away. Grip with hands shoulder-width apart (wide grip on a straight bar, both rope ends with neutral grip if using rope).

  2. Set the body position

    Feet shoulder-width, slight knee bend, **brace the core**. Arms fully extended down, attachment in front of the thighs. Stand tall, chest up, shoulders back.

  3. Pull up to sternum height

    **Pull the attachment vertically up the body** by leading with the elbows — elbows travel up and out to the sides. **Stop when the hands reach sternum height** and the elbows reach shoulder height. 2 seconds.

  4. Pause and squeeze at the top

    1-second pause at the top. **Squeeze the lateral delts and upper traps**. Elbows are at shoulder height, hands at sternum — no higher.

  5. Lower with control

    Lower the attachment in 2-3 seconds back to the starting position. **Maintain tension** — don't let the cable slack at the bottom. Reset, repeat.

Common mistakes to avoid

Variations

Sample workout: 4-week shoulder-traps block

Cable upright rows 1-2 times per week. Pair with direct lateral raises for full side-delt development.

Week Sets × reps Tempo
1 3 × 12 2 sec up + 1 sec squeeze + 2 sec down
2 3 × 15 2 sec up + 2 sec squeeze + 2 sec down
3 4 × 10 1 sec up + 1 sec squeeze + 3 sec down
4 (deload) 3 × 10 Smooth

Frequently asked questions

Is the upright row safe?

Wide-grip versions with low finish height (sternum) are safe for most healthy shoulders. Narrow-grip versions to chin height are well known for causing impingement — avoid those unless you have proven shoulder mobility. The cable wide-grip variation is the safest of all upright row formats.

How high should I pull?</h3

To sternum height for safety — elbows at shoulder height, hands at sternum. Pulling higher (chin or face) causes shoulder impingement in most people. Stop low and benefit from the same delt-and-trap work without the joint risk.

Cable upright row or lateral raise?</h3

Different. Lateral raises isolate the side delt cleanly. Cable upright rows combine side delt + upper traps in one move. For pure side-delt focus, lateral raises win. For time-efficient delt+trap work, upright rows.

How heavy should the cable upright row be?</h3

Moderate. Most lifters work 20-40 kg for 10-15 reps. Heavier loads cause body swing and shoulder cheating — form > weight here.

My shoulders hurt — should I stop?</h3

Yes, immediately. Try the rope version with a much lower finish height (mid-chest), or skip upright rows entirely and replace with lateral raises + shrugs. There’s nothing in the upright row that can’t be replicated more safely with two separate exercises.

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