Suspended One Arm Row

The Suspended One Arm Row primarily works the Erector Spinae, with secondary activation of the Brachialis, Brachioradialis, Infraspinatus, Latissimus Dorsi, Pectoralis Major (Sternal), Posterior Deltoid, Rhomboids, Teres Major, Teres Minor, Trapezius (Lower), Trapezius (Middle) and stabilizer support from the Biceps Femoris (Long Head), Gluteus Maximus. It is a suspension compound exercise at intermediate difficulty.

The Suspended One Arm Row is a intermediate compound exercise performed with suspension, following a horizontal pull movement pattern. It primarily targets the Erector Spinae, with secondary engagement of the Brachialis, Brachioradialis, Infraspinatus, Latissimus Dorsi, Pectoralis Major (Sternal), Posterior Deltoid, Rhomboids, Teres Major, Teres Minor, Trapezius (Lower), Trapezius (Middle). This is a unilateral pulling movement, allowing each side to be trained independently.

A suspension compound pull exercise targeting the Erector Spinae.

EquipmentSuspension
DifficultyIntermediate
TypeCompound
MovementHorizontal Pull
ForcePull
LateralityUnilateral
PrimaryErector Spinae
SecondaryBrachialis, Brachioradialis, Infraspinatus, Latissimus Dorsi, Pectoralis Major (Sternal), Posterior Deltoid, Rhomboids, Teres Major, Teres Minor, Trapezius (Lower), Trapezius (Middle)

Muscles Worked

Front
Back
Primary Secondary Stabilizer

The Erector Spinae is the primary mover, taking on the bulk of the workload throughout the full range of motion. The Brachialis, Brachioradialis, Infraspinatus, Latissimus Dorsi, Pectoralis Major (Sternal), Posterior Deltoid, Rhomboids, Teres Major, Teres Minor, Trapezius (Lower), and Trapezius (Middle) act as secondary movers, assisting the primary muscles and contributing meaningfully to the overall output. The Biceps Femoris (Long Head), Gluteus Maximus act as stabilizers, maintaining joint position and postural alignment throughout the movement.

Primary Muscles

Secondary Muscles

Stabilizer Muscles

How to Perform

Preparation

  1. Grasp suspension handle and momentarily step back until arm is extended forward and straight.
  2. While keeping arm straight and shoulder back, step forward so body reclines back behind suspension handles.
  3. Position body and legs straight at desired angle, hanging from handle with arm straight.
  4. Place resting arm straight against side or front of thigh.

Execution

  1. Pull body up so side of chest makes contact with handle while keeping body and legs straight.
  2. Return until arm is extended straight and shoulder is stretched forward.
  3. Repeat.

Comments

  1. At higher angles, feet can be placed flat on floor.
  2. When angled further back, only heels may contact floor with forefeet raising upward.
  3. Dismounting can be achieved by walking backward until body is upright.
  4. SeeGravity Vectorsfor greater understanding of how body angle influences resistance.
  5. This exercise can be performed on TRXⓇ style suspension trainer or adjustable length gymnastics ring.
  6. Also known as Suspended One Arm Body Row.

Tips & Common Mistakes

Programming Suggestions

Adapt your sets and reps to your training goal.

Strength3–5 sets × 3–6 reps at 80–90% 1RM with 2–4 minutes rest.
Hypertrophy3–5 sets × 6–12 reps at 65–80% 1RM with 60–120 seconds rest.
Endurance2–4 sets × 15–20 reps at 50–65% 1RM with 30–60 seconds rest.

Alternative Exercises

These exercises target the same primary muscles (Erector Spinae) and can be substituted based on your equipment or variation preferences.

Get this data via the REST API or MCP Server.