Exercises Back Weighted Pull-Up

Weighted Pull-Up: Correct Form & Working Weight

Lats primary Pull-Up Bar, Dip Belt Advanced Compound · Pull

The weighted pull-up adds external load to the standard pull-up using a dip belt, chain, or weight vest. Once bodyweight pull-ups become easy, adding weight is the most effective way to build serious lat width and upper body pulling strength.

Front Back
Latsprimary
Biceps, Rear Deltoids, Forearms, Coresecondary

Find Your Working Weight

Enter a recent set to calculate targets

Crunching numbers...
Estimated 1RM
GoalWeightReps × Sets

Save your Weighted Pull-Up numbers

Save to SetMaxx →

Weighted Pull-Up Video Tutorial

Video tutorial coming soon

How to Do the Weighted Pull-Up

  1. Attach weight to a dip belt around your waist, or wear a weighted vest. Start with 5-10kg.
  2. Grab the bar with an overhand grip, slightly wider than shoulder-width. Hang with arms fully extended and the weight hanging below you.
  3. Engage your lats — pull shoulder blades down and back. Pull yourself up by driving elbows toward your hips.
  4. Pull until your chin clears the bar. The added weight makes this significantly harder — fight for every inch.
  5. Lower under control for 2-3 seconds. The loaded eccentric is where most of the growth stimulus comes from.

Weighted Pull-Up Mistakes to Avoid

Adding too much weight too soon — if your form breaks down (kipping, half reps), drop weight. Master 3x10 bodyweight first.
Cutting range of motion — the temptation is to do half reps as weight increases. Full extension at bottom, chin over bar at top.
Swinging — the hanging weight can create momentum. Keep your body still and controlled.
Neglecting the negative — dropping fast from the top wastes the most valuable part. Lower slowly every rep.

Weighted Pull-Up Muscles Worked

Weighted pull-ups target the latissimus dorsi with heavy overload, building width and thickness. Biceps, rear deltoids, forearms, and core all work significantly harder under load.

Weighted Pull-Up Alternatives

Pull-UpNot ready for weighted — build bodyweight strength first
Lat PulldownWant adjustable weight pulling — easier to manage progressive overload
Chin-UpWant more bicep emphasis — also works well weighted
Barbell RowWant a heavy horizontal pull to complement the vertical pull

Weighted Pull-Up Programming

Strength
5 × 3-5
sets × reps
Rest 3-5 min
Hypertrophy
4 × 5-8
sets × reps
Rest 2-3 min
Endurance
3 × 8-12
sets × reps
Rest 90 sec

Not sure how to program the Weighted Pull-Up into your routine?

SetMaxx builds your workout plan and tracks every set with one tap.

Get SetMaxx free →

Weighted Pull-Up FAQ

When should I start weighted pull-ups?
When you can do 3 sets of 10-12 strict bodyweight pull-ups. If you can't do that yet, adding weight will just reinforce bad form.
How much weight should I add?
Start with 5kg and add 2.5kg per week if reps are hitting target. 20kg added is intermediate, 40kg+ is advanced. Progress slowly — pull-up strength builds gradually.
Dip belt or weight vest for weighted pull-ups?
Dip belt is better for heavy loads — it hangs below you naturally. Weight vest works but shifts your center of gravity and gets uncomfortable past 15-20kg. Belt is the standard.
Weighted pull-ups vs heavy lat pulldowns?
Weighted pull-ups are superior for overall back development because they require full body stabilization. But pulldowns allow finer weight adjustments and are easier to program. Use both.