Video of exercise being performed

How to do a Snatch High Pull

Reviewed by Jim Parker, CPT, B.A. Kinesiology

Sets Logged
15,282
Popularity Rank
1110th
Difficulty
Advanced
Hamstrings Strength
81 mSCORE 51st
Equipment Required

Workouts with Snatch High Pull

    Target muscles worked

    Primary Muscles
    Secondary Muscles

    Instructions for Proper Form

    Snatch High Pull is a variation, or more accurately, a piece of the more standard Snatch. Like other Olympic lifts, this exercise is a compound, explosive exercise that targets a wide range of muscle groups. While this exercise is most often used to help improve your Snatch, it’s a perfectly valid exercise, even if you aren’t looking to train with the full movement.

    1. Stand upright with your feet shoulder-width apart and slightly angled out with a loaded barbell on the ground next to your shins.
    2. Hinge at the hips and flex the knees to allow you to grab ahold of the barbell with a double overhand wide grip.
    3. Maintain a straight and rigid spine as your press through your heels to pull the barbell off the ground in a vertical path next to your body by extending your hips and knees.
    4. Once the barbell passes over your mid thigh, explode your hips, knees, and ankles into extension to pull the barbell up to shoulder height keeping your elbows above the barbell.
    5. Drop the barbell back to waist height before lowering back to the starting position.

    Common Form Mistakes

    • Overusing Arms

      Despite the bar moving higher on the high pull than some other pulls, the force should still be coming primarily from extending your legs and driving your hips forward. If you’re struggling, use a lighter weight, and focus on trying to make the bar feel weightless in your hands before adding more weight.

    Weight & 1 Rep Max Calculator

    Average Snatch High Pull standards by male, female, weight, age and height

    Use this calculator to see Fitbod's possible first recommendations for you. This would be your starting line, based on more than 4.5 billion logged sets from 1.1 million users.

    • beginner
      8
      reps
      50
      lbs
      1 Rep Max
      65
      lbs
    • intermediate
      8
      reps
      65
      lbs
      80
      lbs
    • advanced
      8
      reps
      80
      lbs
      100
      lbs

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