The L-sit pull-up combines two advanced gymnastic positions: the L-sit (legs held parallel to the floor in front of the body) and the strict pull-up. Holding the L position throughout the pull stops you from cheating with leg swing and forces the core to work isometrically harder than in almost any other bodyweight exercise.
What it is
The L-sit pull-up is a pull-up performed while holding the legs straight and parallel to the floor in front of the body — the gymnastic L-sit. The lifter pulls up to chest-to-bar or chin-over-bar while never breaking the L position. The shape multiplies the core demand of a standard pull-up.
Muscles worked
| Muscle | Contribution |
|---|---|
| Lats, biceps | ~40 % |
| Hip flexors, core | ~35 % |
| Quads (isometric) | ~15 % |
| Traps, forearms | ~10 % |
How to L-sit pull-up: 5 steps
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Active hang
Pronated grip, shoulder-width. **Engage the scapulae** and brace the core.
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Raise to L position
**Lift the legs to horizontal,** straight and parallel to the floor. Quads engaged.
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Hold the L
**Maintain the L-sit throughout.** Hip flexors and core must hold rigid.
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Strict pull-up
**Pull until chin clears the bar** (or chest if able). Legs never break the L.
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Controlled descent
**Lower over 2-3 seconds** to dead hang while keeping the L. Reset for the next rep.
How it differs from standard pull-up
- Legs held in L position. Hip flexors isometrically hold legs parallel to the floor throughout the rep.
- No leg swing possible. The shape kills any unintended kip — pure strict pulling.
- Bigger core demand. The hip flexors and rectus abdominis work overtime to maintain the L.
- Lower rep ceiling. Expect 50-60% of your strict pull-up count.
Common mistakes
When to use this variation
Use L-sit pull-ups when you can already do 10-12 strict pull-ups and want a serious skill challenge. Program 3-4 sets of 3-6 reps in skill training blocks. They are an excellent prep for muscle-ups and other gymnastic skills. Hold the L-sit separately first; combining requires both elements solid.
FAQ
When can I learn L-sit pull-ups?
Build the L-sit (15-second hold) and 10 strict pull-ups separately first. Only then start combining them.
Can I bend my knees?
Tuck pull-ups (knees bent) are the regression. Full L (legs straight, horizontal) is the gold standard. Half-tuck is fine for progression.
Do they help build a muscle-up?
Yes. The combination of strict pulling power and isometric core control transfers well to the muscle-up transition.
Related exercises
- Pull-Up: the strict baseline
- L-Sit: the static core hold
- Muscle-Up: next gymnastic progression
- Hanging Leg Raise: hip flexor builder




