The chest-to-bar pull-up extends the standard pull-up: instead of stopping when the chin clears the bar, you keep pulling until your chest touches it. The extra range pushes lat activation to its peak and is a benchmark in CrossFit competition standards. It is a humbling progression for anyone who has only ever pulled to chin height.

What it is

The chest-to-bar pull-up is a pull-up performed with a full extended range of motion: every rep starts from a dead hang and finishes with the chest (upper sternum) touching the bar. Compared to chin-over-bar, the chest-to-bar version adds 5-10 cm of pulling range and forces a deeper scapular retraction at the top.

Muscles worked

Muscle Contribution
Lats ~40 %
Rhomboids, traps (mid/lower) ~25 %
Biceps, brachialis ~25 %
Forearms, core ~10 %

How to chest-to-bar pull-up: 5 steps

  1. Pronated grip

    Grab the bar at **shoulder-width pronated grip**. Active hang.

  2. Brace and engage

    **Scapulae down, core tight, glutes squeezed.** Ankles crossed.

  3. Pull with intent

    **Lead with the lats, drive elbows hard down and back.** Generate enough power to keep climbing.

  4. Chest to bar

    **Continue pulling until the chest touches the bar.** Squeeze the back at the top.

  5. Controlled descent

    **Lower over 2-3 seconds** to a full dead hang.

How it differs from standard pull-up

  • Bigger range of motion. Chest touches bar instead of chin clearing it — 5-10 cm more pulling per rep.
  • Higher rep difficulty. Expect to lose 2-4 reps versus your standard pull-up max.
  • Stronger scapular retraction. The deeper finish trains the rhomboids and mid-traps harder.
  • CrossFit standard. Required range for many competition WODs.

Common mistakes

When to use this variation

Use chest-to-bar pull-ups to deepen the pulling range, train CrossFit standards, or add a back-thickness stimulus. Program 3-4 sets of 4-8 strict reps. Once you can do 5+ strict chest-to-bar, you have an excellent foundation for muscle-ups. Pair with regular pull-ups for volume.

FAQ

Chest-to-bar or chin-over-bar?

Chest-to-bar is the deeper, more demanding standard. Chin-over-bar is the everyday rep standard. Use chest-to-bar for one focused block; revert to chin-over for volume.

Is touching with the sternum or upper chest fine?

Upper chest / sternum contact is the standard. Pectoral contact also counts. Below the sternum is too low and is not a chest-to-bar rep.

Does it transfer to muscle-up training?

Strict chest-to-bar pull-ups are the best gateway to the strict muscle-up. Pulling high gives you the elevation needed for the transition.

Rate this post