Walk into any gym and you’ll find no shortage of machines promising to build a bigger back. Pulldowns with bars bent like modern sculpture, cable stations with enough attachments to outfit a commercial fishing boat, and chrome-plated contraptions allegedly engineered to isolate this fiber or that. They all have value. But nothing—and I mean nothing—recruits back fibers like a well-executed set of pull-ups.

Pullups

6 Moves to Build Bigger Lats

Pulldowns will only get you so far. Vary your pullup repertoire to build a wide, muscular back.

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Why Pull-Ups Are Considered the Best Back Exercise

Pull-ups can ultimately be performed weighted, with plates dangling from a dip belt like medieval armor, but even bodyweight pull-ups alone can produce dramatic gains in both back width and middle-back thickness. In fact, many of the greatest physiques ever built relied heavily on them.

I remember training at Gold’s Gym Venice in the early ’90s and hearing Shawn Ray talk about how he started every back workout with 50 pull-ups. Didn’t matter how many sets it took. What mattered was that he bagged 50 before moving on.

The mindset is that the pull-up is standard.

How Pull-Ups Build Back Width and Thickness

The kinesiology involved is remarkable. Few movements recruit more musculature simultaneously. The lats do the heavy pulling, but they don’t work alone. Rhomboids, teres muscles, traps, rear delts, biceps, brachialis, forearms, grip musculature, abs and intercostals all contribute to the movement. Even the hands and fingers become active players. That’s why pull-ups feel different from machine work. You’re not simply moving weight. You’re moving your entire body through space and that demands cooperation from a tremendous amount of muscle tissue.

Hands gripping a pullup bar
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Overhand vs. Underhand Pull-Ups: What’s the Difference?

Grip selection can also subtly change the emphasis of the movement. A traditional overhand or pronated grip tends to emphasize lat width and upper back development while heavily involving the outer portions of the biceps and brachialis. Reverse or underhand grips—often called chin-ups—shift more emphasis toward the biceps and lower lat region while still hammering the back. Neither is superior. Both deserve a place in a serious training program.

How To Use the Pullup No Matter Your Level

The beauty of pull-ups is its adaptability. Beginners can use assistance while advanced trainees can make them brutally difficult. For experienced lifters, weighted pull-ups become one of the finest upper-body strength builders available. Add enough iron to your waist and the movement evolves from an endurance exercise into a raw demonstration of pulling power. And yes, there’s a reason pull-ups have long been part of military and law-enforcement fitness testing. Apparently governments still appreciate citizens capable of hauling their own carcass over an obstacle.

But what if you can’t do one?

Good. You have somewhere to start.

Most larger gyms have a machine called the Gravitron. It allows you to perform assisted pull-ups and dips by counterbalancing your bodyweight with a pinned weight stack. The more weight you select, the lighter you become.

Find a resistance level that allows you to perform several clean repetitions and work from there. As strength improves, gradually reduce the assistance. The machine quite literally teaches you how to become lighter.

No Gravitron? No problem.

Position a CrossFit cube, bench, or even a sturdy dumbbell upright beneath the bar and use it as a step. Grab the bar and use the platform to help pop yourself into the top position of the pull-up. Now comes the magic. Lower yourself slowly. Count to six.

This is called negative training, and it works because muscles are often stronger during the lowering, or eccentric, phase of movement as tension gradually ebbs. By controlling that descent and resisting gravity, you build the strength necessary to eventually perform full pull-ups on your own.

Pop up.

Lower slowly.

Do it again. And again.

Eventually, one rep becomes three. Three becomes six. Six becomes 10. And before long, you’re no longer negotiating with the bar. You own it.

From beginner to expert, the pull-up remains a mandatory staple in any serious lifter’s bag of tricks. Cable machines may evolve and equipment may become increasingly sophisticated, but iron still speaks its own language. And few exercises speak louder than the pull-up.