Exercises Arms Cable Curl

Cable Curl: Correct Form & Muscles Worked

Biceps primary Cable Machine Beginner Isolation · Pull

The cable curl provides constant tension throughout the entire range of motion, unlike dumbbells which lose tension at the top. The cable keeps the bicep loaded from bottom to top, making every inch of every rep productive.

Front Back
Bicepsprimary
Forearmssecondary

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Cable Curl Video Tutorial

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How to Do the Cable Curl

  1. Set cable to lowest position. Attach a straight bar, EZ bar, or rope handle. Stand facing the machine.
  2. Grab the handle with underhand grip. Step back so there's tension. Arms extended.
  3. Curl the handle up by flexing biceps. Elbows pinned at your sides.
  4. Squeeze at the top. The cable maintains full tension here — no dead spot like dumbbells.
  5. Lower under control. The cable keeps tension through the entire negative.

Cable Curl Mistakes to Avoid

Standing too close — step back enough that there's tension even with arms fully extended.
Swinging — the cable makes it easier to cheat because the resistance is constant. Stay strict.
Elbows moving forward — pin them at your sides throughout.
Using only one attachment — rotate between straight bar, EZ bar, and rope. Each shifts emphasis slightly.

Cable Curl Muscles Worked

The cable curl targets the biceps brachii with constant tension throughout the full range. Unlike dumbbells (which lose tension at the top) or barbells (which lose tension at the bottom), cables maintain resistance at every point.

Cable Curl Alternatives

Barbell CurlWant free weight curling with heavier loads
Dumbbell CurlWant independent arm curling with supination
Bayesian CurlWant a behind-body cable curl for long head stretch
Preacher CurlWant locked-position curling for maximum strictness

Cable Curl Programming

Strength
3 × 6-8
sets × reps
Rest 90 sec
Hypertrophy
3 × 10-12
sets × reps
Rest 60 sec
Endurance
3 × 12-15
sets × reps
Rest 45 sec

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Cable Curl FAQ

Cable curls vs barbell curls?
Cable provides constant tension. Barbell allows heavier loads and is harder at the bottom. Both are effective. Use barbell for strength, cable for isolation and constant tension.
What attachment for cable curls?
Straight bar for standard curling. EZ bar if wrists hurt. Rope for hammer-grip and peak squeeze (spread the rope at the top). Rotate between all three.
High or low cable position?
Low (floor level) for standard curls. High cable curls (overhead cable curl) target the short head more in a flexed-arm position. Low is the default.
Are cable curls effective?
Very — the constant tension means every inch of every rep is working the bicep. Many coaches argue cables are superior to free weights for bicep hypertrophy due to this advantage.