Have you ever taken a critical look at how you are doing things?

Broken down every single exercise?

When you think about calisthenics, chin ups are usually one of the first exercises that come to mind.

 

Still, it’s not quite clear to a lot of people how to actually progress to their first chin up.

You might be one of those people.

And for the people who already have a chin up in their body weight workout backpack, they are usually missing some check points.

You might have skipped some steps to speed up the process.

 

Let me ask you this:

Do you know what a good chin up is?

You might think you already know.

 

What if I told you, chances are you don’t.

What if I told you that the chin ups you are doing right now will end up becoming weak spots down the road.

Want to know why?

 

 

 

5 Progressions To A Proper Chin Up

 

So you’ve been doing chin ups?

At least so you think.

When it comes to a chin up you need to keep a few things in mind.

 

Your shoulders have to be mobile enough.

Your grip has to be strong enough.

And you have to be able to activate different muscle groups. One after the other in the right sequence.

 

Done incorrectly and you will use momentum to lift yourself up.

Flare out your elbows which will cause tendonitis.

And you will never develop strength through the entire move.

Meaning you will have a big ‘reality check’ when you move on to muscle up exercises.

 

There are 5 progression which you can use to slowly build and to correct your current chin up.

Perfect each of those before you move on to the next.

No chin up will ever be the same again.

Ready to chin up?

 

 

1. The Passive Hang

 

Chin-up-full-version-for-beginners

 

Main goal: Developing basic shoulder strength and flexibility

Additional goal: Warming up for pulling exercises and providing decompression for the lower back

 

1) Start by grabbing the bar with an underhand grip at about shoulder width.

2) Allow yourself to hang completely relaxed.

3) The only thing working at this point are your lower arms and hands which you need to activate to keep hanging.

4) Hold this for time.

 

Mastery at 5×60 seconds

 

Note: While simply hanging from a bar probably isn’t the thing that makes you look cool. It’s the thing your shoulders need the most, especially if you want to prevent injuries or have a history of shoulder issues.

 

 

2. The Active Hang

 

Active-hang-for-chin-up-bar-brothers

Chin-up-for-calisthenics-beginners

 

Main goal: Increasing strength in the scapulae area/shoulders

Additional goal: Developing the skill to activate different parts of your shoulder, increasing the flow of blood and recovering from shoulder injuries

 

1) Start by grabbing the bar with an underhand grip at about shoulder width.

2) Allow yourself to hang completely relaxed.

3) From a fully relaxed position, both push your shoulders down and pull your shoulder blades together until they touch. These two things are called depression and retraction.

4) Hold this for 1-3 seconds and go back to your passive hang.

5) Repeat.

 

Mastery at 5×15 repetitions

 

Note: Most people have completely lost the ability to retract their shoulder blades, mostly because we sit behind desk and are front communicators so very little activity actually requires full retraction.

For a proper chin up this is essential however.

If you have lost this ability, I suggest you check out this video and work on your shoulder mobility first.

 

 

3. The Chin Row

 

Bar-Brother-chin-Up-for-beginners

Bar-Brother-Beginner-routine-chin-up

Chin-up-for-calisthenics-routines

 

Main goal: Going through the entire chin up motion, understanding the movement and building strength for a full chin up

 

1) Find a lower chin up bar which allows you to place a part of your weight on the ground.

2) Start by grabbing the bar with an underhand grip at about shoulder width.

2) Allow yourself to hang completely relaxed.

3) From a fully relaxed position, both push your shoulders down and pull your shoulder blades together until they touch. These two things are called depression and retraction.

4) Activate your arms at this point and pull yourself to the bar until you chest touches the bar.

5) Hold it for 1-3 seconds and slowly lower yourself to the active hang and from the active hang go to the passive hang.

6) Repeat.

 

Mastery at 5×15 repetitions

 

Note: If you are unable to touch the bar with your chest, chances are that your retraction isn’t sufficient. I suggest you check out this video and work on your shoulder mobility first.

 

 

4. The Negative Chin Up

 

Chin-up-eccentrics

Chin-up-for-beginners-eccentric-training

Bar-Brother-chin-ups

 

Main goal: Conditioning the tissues in the lower arms and shoulders and building full chin up strength

Additional goal: If you are doing a full routine and are unable to do a full chin up, instead of completely stopping, transition to a chin up negative.

 

1) Find a bar which will allow you to jump into the highest position. Ideally a position where your chest touches the bar.

2) Start by grabbing the bar with an underhand grip at about shoulder width.

3) From full retraction and depression, slowly over a 10-20 second count lower yourself to an active hang.

4) Make sure you keep your elbows as close to your body as possible to prevent tendon issues.

5) Go from your active hang to a passive hang and fully relax.

6) Repeat by jumping into the chest to bar position again.

 

Mastery at 5x5x20 second repetitions

 

Note: Only transition to this exercise if you can complete the previous exercises with ease and have full retraction. The eccentric/negative chin up will place the biggest possible load on your body.

If you lack preparation and mobility in your shoulders you will run yourself into unnecessary injuries by compensating with your elbows. Patience is key.

 

 

5. The Full Chin Up

 

Chin-up-full-version-for-beginners

Full-Chin-up-for-bar-brothers

The-full-chin-up-for-beginners

 

Main goal: Going through the full chin up and building strength for more advanced moves

Additional goal: Feeling cool and victorious 😉

 

1) Start by grabbing the bar with an underhand grip at about shoulder width.

2) Allow yourself to hang completely relaxed.

3) From a fully relaxed position, both push your shoulders down and pull your shoulder blades together until they touch. These two things are called depression and retraction.

4) From your active hang initiate your arm motion explosively, keep your elbows as close to your body as possible.

5) And touch the bar with your chest. No touch, no count.

6) Hold the tension at the top position for 1-3 seconds and slowly go down over a 3-4 second count.

7) Go back to your active hang and lower yourself into a passive hang by fully relaxing.

8) Repeat.

 

Mastery at 5×5 repetitions

 

Note: If executed correctly a simple chin up will become more effective and will allow you to develop muscles and strength at a much faster pace.  Over time you will automate the different steps.

If you break down a chin up it basically comes down to the following sequence: Passive hang -> active hang -> activate arms -> chest to bar -> active hang -> passive hang.

This sequence might mean you discover that instead of 10 bad form chin ups you can only do 3 good form chin ups, but please drop the ego.

That’s a big part of becoming a master at something.

 

 

You Don’t Want To Go Back To The Basics

 

And it sucks. I know.

You’re probably like, “Rich really!$!@$%, do you mean I have to start all over again? You’ve got to be kidding me!”

The honest answer:

Yes and no.

 

Yes, when you embarked on your journey, you might have accidentally taken a step in the wrong direction.

Skipped a check point.

Completely missed the sign saying: ‘quicksand ahead’.

 

If you realize you have, this is the time to deal with it.

The good news is, there are also a lot of things you have learned down the road.

And you still carry those is your backpack of experience.

 

Just realize that ‘basic’ often isn’t as basic as it sounds.

And if you are facing or stuck in a ‘quicksand’ of injuries already.

Use this blog as a rope to climb out.

 

Beast mode ON!

 

 

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  1. As always, awesome content, thank you very much.

    I definetaly need to work on my shoulder mobility: unfortunately the video is unavailable that you linked out to. Do you have another link?

    Thanks again for sharing Rich.

      1. Hi Rich,

        I’m also having trouble accessing any of the videos, the only one that seems to work is the chin up progression video. Thanks for the great content by the way! Looking forward to starting the beginners course.

  2. Hi Rich,
    thanks for this great article.
    I want to establish the basics for bar training, but I even struggle with the first 5 X 60 sec passive hang (can hang on only 30 -50 sec each time). Is it effective to do this everyday to improve or should I rest in between?
    I combine this exercise with
    5 X 12 Incline Bar Dip (mastered)
    3 X 12 Push ups (have to do push ups on knees after first set)
    after that I run for 30 minutes.

    Before I tried “the system”, but had to abort mission because of lack of strength. The whole process seems to take very long for me and maybe my workout method is wrong. How can I improve faster, you have any advice?

    1. Hey Tobi,

      You are more than welcome!

      Yes, you can do the hang every single day. You’ll make quick progress and it will improve your grip strength which basically improves every single upper strength body exercise you do.

      Don’t think in terms of ‘fast’, think in terms of ‘consistent’. If you are sticking to the principles you should be stronger every single workout.

      Read this post for the principles: http://www.barbrothersgroningen.com/muscle-growth-calisthenics/

      Goodluck my friend!

      1. Pavel wrote about a 5x5x5 training method. Basically, 5 reps of 5 exercises for 5 days per week. Never to failure. Before your work set of 5, remind your body of the movement with a few singles of the exercise (to “warm up”). Manage the weight so you feel stronger leaving the gym than when you came in.

        Say you do clean & press, deadlift, dips, chin ups, and hanging leg raises, you could easily work on this chin up progression as part of the 555 method. Add 5-10 seconds or a rep each session to reach mastery; fluctuate as necessary to stay fresh. See where you are in 6 weeks, then try a new way to keep progressing.

  3. Hey rich great and amazing content as usual but
    i need to know who many reps should i achieve in every single exercise before moving to the next one ?
    like should i be able to fulfill 10 active hang reps before going to the chin row ? or what ?
    plz explain this to me and thnx from deep inside my heart for ur phenomenal work rich
    Beast Mode Always On !!!!!!

  4. Hi rich. Did you change the seconds count with the chin up negative? It was 6 too 10 counts. Now it is 10 too 20 second count. Right?

  5. Hey rich. Good. Takes a lot off time too get there but i am still going. I am now doing the chin upp negative doing 5 times 6 seconds. My goal is 10 seconds 5 times. Thats why i was shocked too see that now it was 20 sec :). Its very importent for me too master the chin upp and i progress only when i master the previous training. So far so good. I am almost going too do the full chin upp. But its go slow because in the pasti had many shoulder injurys. But with these steps its going too be allright. And also i have a real bodybuilding body. What i mean by that. I have too almost nothing too grow. When i started i was 94 kilogram. Now i am 110 kilograms. So the chinupp progression is also heavier this way. But one day i am gonna do the muslce upp and then i am very happy! How are you doing rich? Fist pump!

    1. Hey Lowie,

      Sounds great! Hope you are doing well!

      Fantastic over here, take it easy on the shoulders, that’s a big weight gain, keep in mind that it makes everything much harder in terms of bodyweight training. I’m sure you will, but take your time, no rush!

      *Fist bump*

      1. Hi Rich. It's bin a long time. I had to quit back then. I was sick. Now I started Al over again with the chin up. The last step is now 5×5 chinups. Are you sure?? That's 25 chin ups. Isn't that a lot for a beginner? I thought back in the days it's was 5 chin ups. And I can not find the post clean up your pull ups any more. Did you delete this 1? Greetings Lowie

  6. Hi! Excellent article.

    A fan of running here, so my upper body has seen a lot of neglect through the years even though I’m healthier and leaner than ever. But my PR is 5 chin-ups (probably not great form anyway) and after years of struggling, I decided to develop my upper body because it also helps with running.

    I stumbled upon your article and I gotta say – it inspired me to start right at the basics.

    However – while performing the underhand grip dead hangs – I must be doing them wrong, because I feel a lot of strain on my elbows and on my wrists. With overhand grip dead hangs – there is no such problem.

    Should I fix my grip – wider, narrower? Or is it something else?

    Thanks!
    Alex

    1. Hey Alex,

      It could be anything. But it’s something you need to experiment with, your body simply needs to adapt and adaptation is not an easy process as you might know from running ;).

      Patience and managing the dosages is key.

      *Fist bump*

  7. Do you have any info on a full pull-up? Is it also shoulder width apart or just bigger than? Do I also pull till chest hits the bar, hold for 1 to 3 seconds and lower within 3 to 4 seconds and then go again? I want to start the 6 month plan but first want to make sure I’m doing everything as I should be.

  8. Thanks for the thorough description. I am a senior and thought doing 5-7 rather sloppy pullups was an accomplishment.Will do your real pullup to see how well I do.

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