When it comes to building a strong, balanced, and injury-resistant back, one of the most common questions is: How many back exercises should I do in a single workout? The answer depends on your training goals, experience level, and how your overall program is structured—but there is a sweet spot that works for most people.
The Ideal Number of Back Exercises Per Workout
For the average lifter aiming for strength, hypertrophy, or general fitness, 3 to 5 back exercises per session is a solid range. This allows you to target all major areas of the back—lats, traps, rhomboids, and spinal erectors—without overtraining or diminishing returns.
Here’s a general breakdown:
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Beginners: 2–3 back exercises
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Intermediate lifters: 3–4 back exercises
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Advanced lifters: 4–5 back exercises, sometimes split between horizontal and vertical pulling patterns
Structuring Your Back Workout
When planning your back workout, consider these three movement categories to ensure complete development:
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Vertical Pulls – Targets the latissimus dorsi
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Examples: Pull-ups, Lat pulldowns
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Horizontal Pulls – Emphasizes mid-back and rhomboids
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Examples: Barbell rows, Seated cable rows
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Isolation or Accessory Moves – Refines details and supports stability
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Examples: Face pulls, Straight-arm pulldowns, Back extensions
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A well-rounded session might look like this:
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Pull-ups – 4 sets
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Barbell rows – 4 sets
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Seated cable rows – 3 sets
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Face pulls – 3 sets
This combination hits all major muscle groups in the back while respecting recovery.
How Many Lat Exercises Should You Include?
If your focus is on lat development specifically, include 1–2 exercises that directly target them—usually in the vertical pulling category. But avoid overloading your workout with similar movements. For example, doing lat pulldowns, assisted pull-ups, and machine pullovers all in one session may create redundancy.
Back Training Frequency
How often you train back also affects how many exercises you should do per session. If you're hitting back once a week, you might want to do a more comprehensive 4–5 exercise routine. If you're splitting back work across two sessions (e.g., pull day and deadlift day), you can keep it to 2–3 focused movements per workout.
Personal Experience: The Plateau Breaker
When I hit a plateau in my rowing strength a few years ago, I realized my workouts had become too repetitive. I was doing three horizontal pulls every back day with minimal variation. By reducing the number of total exercises to four and shifting one to an isometric movement like the prone Y-raise, I not only recovered faster but also began progressing in weights again. The key wasn’t doing more—it was doing better.
Final Thoughts
You don’t need to cram in every back exercise you’ve ever seen on Instagram. Instead, aim for quality over quantity, ensure you're covering multiple movement patterns, and always align your volume with your recovery capacity. For most people, 3 to 5 well-executed back exercises per workout is plenty to build width, thickness, and strength.
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