If you’ve ever felt your grip give out before your back on a set of pull-ups, you already know the answer: yes, pull-ups absolutely work your forearms. But what’s often overlooked is how they do it — and how you can tweak your training to build thicker, stronger forearms using just a pull-up bar.
Why Your Forearms Light Up During Pull-Ups
Every pull-up is a compound movement involving multiple muscle groups — lats, biceps, traps — but the unsung heroes are your forearm muscles. Specifically, the brachioradialis, wrist flexors, and extensors are under constant tension to keep your grip locked in as you pull your body upward.
The moment you hang from a bar, your forearms engage isometrically. And unlike curls or presses, where you can “rest” between reps, your forearms are on duty nonstop during every second of the set.
Pull-Ups for Forearm Gains: What Actually Works
Not all pull-ups hit your forearms the same way. To really target them, try these variations:
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Forearm pull-ups (false grip): Instead of wrapping your thumb around the bar, keep it on the same side as your fingers. This forces more work onto your forearms and builds crushing grip strength.
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Thick bar or towel pull-ups: Wrapping a towel around the bar or using a fat grip makes it harder to hold on, lighting up your forearms even faster.
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L-sit pull-ups: Holding your legs out in front while pulling up not only works your core but also forces your forearms to stabilize harder through the movement.
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Slow eccentrics: Lower yourself over 4–5 seconds. The time under tension does wonders for forearm development.
A Simple Forearm Workout Using Just a Pull-Up Bar
You don’t need fancy machines to train your forearms. Here’s a no-frills workout you can do with any pull-up bar:
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Dead Hangs – 3 sets x 30–45 seconds
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Forearm Pull-Ups (False Grip) – 3 sets x 5–8 reps
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Towel Pull-Ups – 3 sets x 6–10 reps
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Negative Pull-Ups – 3 sets x 5 slow lowers (4–5 seconds down)
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Wrist Rolls (using a bar or towel) – 3 sets to failure
Rest 60–90 seconds between sets. Grip strength and endurance will build quickly — and your forearms will follow.
What I Learned the Hard Way
Years ago, I was focused almost entirely on back width. My pull-up game was strong — or so I thought. But I kept stalling out around 10 reps, always because my grip gave out. I started incorporating towel pull-ups and slow negatives into my workouts, not to target forearms specifically, but just to get better at pull-ups.
The result? My reps went up… and my sleeves got tighter. I didn’t realize how much the forearms were holding me back — or how much they could grow from just changing how I hung from the bar.
Final Word
Do pull-ups build forearms? Absolutely — if you let them. Standard reps will give you some forearm growth over time, but with just a few smart tweaks, a simple pull-up bar can turn into one of the most effective tools for building thicker, more powerful forearms. Grip it, hold it, and control every rep — your forearms will thank you.
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