Exercise Database
Bars Exercises
Browse bar-based exercises for pull-up strength, dip progressions, and bodyweight upper-body development with simple equipment.
Muscle Groups
close grip chin up
chin up
chin ups narrow parallel grip
chin up
pull up
weighted triceps dips
hanging deadbug
ring high suspended row
chest dips
ring suspended row
assisted chest dip
hanging straight leg raise
Overview
What to know before you pick a bars exercise
Bars and rings are powerful because they let you train with your own bodyweight while demanding real control through the shoulders, trunk, and grip. They are simple tools, but they can be brutally effective.
This collection is useful when you want a practical way to build upper-body pulling strength, bodyweight pressing ability, and scalable progressions that work in both home and gym environments.
Selection Guide
How to choose the right option from this collection
Use bars for strength relative to bodyweight
If you care about pull-ups, dips, and body control, bar-based training gives direct practice without much setup overhead.
Scale by leverage and assistance
Many bar exercises are easy to regress or progress by changing angle, assistance, or tempo, so they work for a wide range of levels.
Stay honest about shoulder control
Bodyweight work exposes weak positions quickly, so choose variations that let you keep the shoulder organized from start to finish.
Programming Notes
How to program bars work without guesswork
Own the basics first
Rows, assisted pull-ups, dips, and hanging core work usually produce more progress than chasing advanced calisthenics too early.
Use quality reps over grinding
Bar work rewards clean position and full range more than repeated ugly attempts that teach you to escape weak positions.
Balance push and pull volume
If the setup lets you do both dips and pull-ups, keep the weekly split balanced so one side of the shoulder girdle does not dominate.
Mistakes
Common bars training mistakes
- •Jumping to advanced progressions without enough scapular control.
- •Training only pull-ups and neglecting rows or horizontal pulling.
- •Letting shoulder position collapse at the bottom of the rep.
FAQ
Questions people ask about bars exercises
Are pull-up bars enough for upper-body growth?
They can be surprisingly effective, especially when combined with rows, dip variations, and progressive overload through leverage or added load.
What if you cannot do a strict pull-up yet?
Start with regressions such as supported rows, band-assisted pull-ups, controlled negatives, or reduced-angle variations.
Do rings count as bar-based equipment here?
Yes. They create a similar bodyweight training environment while adding more instability and freedom of movement.
Should bars be your only upper-body tool?
They can cover a lot, but many people still progress faster when bar work is paired with dumbbells, cables, or machines for extra volume and easier overload.