The T-bar row is the back exercise that bridges the gap between the heavy barbell row and the lower-back-friendly seated cable row. By anchoring one end of the bar to the floor (or in a landmine attachment), you get a fixed pivot point that keeps the lift smooth and reduces lower-back strain.

The T-bar row is a favorite of bodybuilders for back thickness — particularly the mid-back. Done with proper form, it builds the rhomboids, lower traps and lats with constant tension and minimal lower-back contribution.

What is the T-bar row?

The T-bar row is a horizontal pulling movement performed with a barbell anchored at one end (in a landmine attachment, corner of a wall, or dedicated T-bar machine). You straddle the bar, hinge over with a neutral grip, and pull the bar toward your lower chest by driving the elbows back.

Two main versions exist. The chest-supported T-bar row uses a dedicated machine with a chest pad — eliminates lower-back work entirely, pure back hypertrophy. The free-standing T-bar row uses a landmine and is closer to a barbell row in feel. Both are valid — the chest-supported version is more strict, the free-standing version allows heavier loads.

Muscles worked

Muscle group Role Contribution
Mid-back (rhomboids, lower traps) Primary mover ~40 %
Lats Shoulder extension ~30 %
Biceps brachii Elbow flexion ~15 %
Erector spinae · Rear delts Stabilisation ~15 %

The T-bar row hits the mid-back harder than the lats — the neutral grip and pull angle bias the rhomboids and lower traps. For lifters chasing back thickness (rather than width), the T-bar row earns its place.

How to T-bar row: 5 steps

  1. Set up the bar

    Place a barbell in a landmine attachment (or wedge one end into the corner of a wall). Load weight on the other end. Straddle the bar so it sits between your feet.

  2. Set the hinge position

    Hinge at the hips, push the butt back, slight bend in the knees. Torso about 30-45° from horizontal. Grip the V-bar attachment (or grip near the loaded end with both hands).

  3. Brace and engage the back

    Pull shoulder blades back and down. Take a deep breath, brace the core. Lower back flat — no rounding. Lats engaged.

  4. Pull to the lower chest

    Drive the elbows back, pulling the bar toward your lower chest / sternum. **Elbows lead** — don't curl with the biceps. Squeeze the shoulder blades together at the top.

  5. Lower under control

    Reverse in 2-3 seconds. Maintain the hinged torso position — don't bob up and down. Fully extend the arms at the bottom for a lat stretch. Reset, repeat.

Common mistakes to avoid

Variations

  • Chest-supported T-bar row. On a dedicated machine with a chest pad. Eliminates lower-back demand entirely. Most strict version.
  • Landmine row. Same setup, single-arm with a wider grip. Excellent for asymmetry-fixing.
  • Wide-grip T-bar row. V-bar replaced by a longer bar with wide grip. More mid-back, less biceps.
  • Meadows row. Single-arm landmine row with overhand grip. Bigger lat stretch.
  • Barbell row. Free-weight bilateral horizontal pull. Heavier loading.
  • Seated cable row. Cable variant with constant tension.

Sample workout: 4-week back thickness block

T-bar rows once or twice per week. Pair with vertical pulls (pull-ups, lat pulldowns) on alternate days.

Week Sets × reps RPE
1 3 × 10 7
2 4 × 8 7-8
3 5 × 6 8
4 (deload) 3 × 8 6

Frequently asked questions

T-bar row or barbell row?

Both. T-bar row is easier on the lower back and more strict because of the fixed pivot. Barbell row allows heavier free-weight loads and trains the lower back as a stabiliser. Cycle through both across blocks.

How heavy should I T-bar row?

Most lifters can T-bar row about 60-75 % of their barbell row for the same reps. The pivot point reduces leverage. The right weight is one you can do strict for 6-10 reps with no torso bobbing.

I don’t have a T-bar machine — what alternative?

Use a landmine attachment with any barbell. Anchor one end in the corner of a wall or in a dedicated landmine. Same exercise. Or use a dumbbell row instead — different angle, similar muscle target.

Why does my lower back fatigue during T-bar rows?

The free-standing version still demands isometric lower-back work to hold the hinged position. If your back tires before your back muscles, switch to the chest-supported variant. It eliminates lower-back fatigue entirely.

Should I pull to the chest or the abdomen?

To the lower chest / sternum. That’s where the elbow position naturally stops with proper form. Pulling to the abdomen biases the lats more; pulling higher biases the upper back. Stay at the lower chest for a balance.

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