Hanging Leg Raise
Hanging Leg Raise is a expert isolation movement that trains the Abdominals. It requires body only. There are 0 known variations and 8 peer exercises that target the same primary muscle.
- 1 of 9 exercises targeting the Abdominals
- Level: expert
PlainExercise cross-links 0 variations and 8 peer exercises sharing the same primary muscle.
What the Hanging Leg Raise Data Reveals
Hanging Leg Raise is classified in the PlainExercise database as a expert-level isolation movement with a pull force profile, primarily training the Abdominals. The canonical form requires body only, and the movement falls within the strength category. The parent record is sourced from the public-domain Free Exercise DB and enriched with exercise-science framing unique to PlainExercise, including structured common-mistake patterns derived from the force and mechanic fields above.
Within the same primary-muscle cohort, the Abdominals is trained by 9 catalogued movements in total — meaning any practitioner planning a session has at least 8 alternatives that load the same tissue through different joint angles or equipment profiles. No alternate-equipment variations have been catalogued for Hanging Leg Raise yet; the canonical form is the documented path. The documented execution runs 4 discrete steps, each one derived directly from the upstream record and reproduced verbatim rather than paraphrased.
Context matters: this database aggregates exercise science taxonomy (level, mechanic, force, primary/secondary musculature, equipment) but does not and cannot account for individual biomechanics, joint history, recovery status, or training context. The common-mistake and progression framing below is derived programmatically from the classification fields and represents general exercise-science consensus rather than case-specific coaching. This is not medical or personal-training advice. Consult a physician, physical therapist, or certified trainer before starting a new exercise or modifying an existing program — particularly if you have prior injuries, pain, recent surgery, cardiovascular limitations, or are pregnant.
Muscles worked
Exercise profile
| Attribute | Value |
|---|---|
| Difficulty | expert |
| Mechanic | isolation |
| Force | pull |
| Equipment | body only |
| Category | strength |
| Primary muscle | Abdominals |
| Secondary muscles | 0 |
| Variations available | 0 |
Source: Free Exercise DB (CC0); profile derived per exercise record.
Force Type
Pull
isolation
Difficulty
Expert
isolation
Variations
0
equipment swaps
Muscles
1
primary + secondary
Muscle recruitment breakdown
Abdominals is the prime mover at roughly 70% of total recruitment
0 secondary muscles share the remaining load
Classified as expert difficulty
Muscle activation profile
Relative recruitment between the primary mover and secondary stabilizers.
Method: muscle counts from Free Exercise DB; relative-share normalization. Not EMG-derived — actual activation varies by load and form.
Exercise intensity context
Where Hanging Leg Raise falls relative to other common exercises on the MET intensity scale.
MET estimate based on exercise level classification. Actual MET varies by intensity and individual.
How to do it
- Hang from a chin-up bar with both arms extended at arms length in top of you using either a wide grip or a medium grip. The legs should be straight down with the pelvis rolled slightly backwards. This will be your starting position.
- Raise your legs until the torso makes a 90-degree angle with the legs. Exhale as you perform this movement and hold the contraction for a second or so.
- Go back slowly to the starting position as you breathe in.
- Repeat for the recommended amount of repetitions.
Common mistakes
- Rushing through reps — controlled tempo (2-3s down, 1-2s up) is what drives muscle tension, not raw speed.
- Partial range of motion — moving the joint through its full safe range is what most reliably separates effective from wasted reps.
- Using momentum instead of muscle — isolation movements like Hanging Leg Raise reward strict form. If you're swinging the weight, it's too heavy.
- Shrugging the shoulders up toward the ears on pull movements — keep shoulder blades down and back to load the correct muscles.
- Breathing out of sync with the lift — brace and inhale during the lowering phase, exhale on the exertion.
Who this is for
- Experienced trainees who can load the movement safely and have mastered the progression ladder below
- People who want to train the Abdominals
- People training at home without equipment
Who this is NOT for
- Anyone with acute pain in the joints or muscles involved — pain is a stop signal, not a soreness signal
- Complete beginners — start with the progression ladder below and build the pattern before loading it
- Anyone with a recent surgery, cardiovascular limitation, or pregnancy complication without physician clearance
Progression path
At this stage, progress comes from refining technique, reducing rest between sets, and periodizing intensity across training cycles rather than chasing heavier loads.
See the Progression guide for a full framework on when to advance, and the Compound vs Isolation guide to decide when to prioritize this movement in your program.
Safety notes
- Sharp or joint pain is a stop signal. Muscle soreness during sets is normal; pain is not.
- Warm up the involved joints with 2-3 progressively loaded sets before training to a working weight.
- If you have a history of injury in the loaded joints (knees, shoulders, lower back), consult a physical therapist before loading this movement.
- This is an advanced movement. It should be loaded only after you have mastered the intermediate progression, ideally with supervision.
- General information only. Consult a physician or certified trainer before starting any new exercise program.
Related exercises
Other exercises that target the Abdominals.
See all Abdominals exercises.