Lats Exercises

95 movements primarily target the lats. Use the sections below to browse by difficulty, or see the How to Choose guide for selection help.

57 beginner · 32 intermediate · 6 advanced — breakdown computed across all tagged exercises.

What the Lats Exercise Data Reveals

The PlainExercise database catalogues 95 movements that list the lats as their primary target. Within that cohort, 57 are tagged beginner, 32 intermediate, 6 advanced, and 0 carry no explicit level classification. Every record is sourced from the public-domain Free Exercise DB and is grouped below by the upstream difficulty tag rather than by a PlainExercise-imposed ranking, so the distribution reflects what practicing coaches and federations have historically classified rather than a synthetic opinion.

This level spread has a practical signal: when a muscle group is dominated by advanced-level records, it typically means the movement patterns require coordination, loaded stabilizers, or technique built across months of practice, and that substitutions at the beginner level are limited. When beginner and intermediate records dominate, practitioners can generally enter the muscle group with bodyweight or light-load variations and progress through the list. For the lats, the beginner-accessible pool is at least as deep as the advanced pool, meaning new trainees have a clear on-ramp.

Context matters: this database tracks exercise taxonomy — primary muscle, equipment, mechanic, difficulty — but does not account for individual anatomy, joint history, or programming context. "Primary muscle" is a taxonomy label, not a claim that the listed movement exclusively isolates the lats. Compound lifts trained for the lats necessarily recruit stabilizers and secondary movers. This page is general educational information, not medical or personal-training advice. Consult a physician, physical therapist, or certified trainer before adding or modifying exercises — especially if you have pre-existing injuries, chronic pain, cardiovascular conditions, or are pregnant.

Beginner (57)

Foundational movements to learn the pattern.

Intermediate (32)

Movements that require basic strength and coordination.

Advanced (6)

Complex or highly loaded movements for experienced lifters.

Other muscle groups

Source: Free Exercise DB (CC0) + wger.de (AGPL), 2026. See the methodology page.

Disclaimer: General information only. Consult a physician or certified trainer before starting any new exercise program.

Related

Data sourced from official open-source exercise reference databases (wger.de, public exercise repositories). See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by PlainExercise Editorial