StrengthBeginner

Cable Supinated Face Pull

A face pull pulled with palms-up grip that hammers the rear delts and rotator cuff while bulletproofing the shoulders.

GIF · DemoCable Supinated Face Pull

What is the cable supinated face pull?

The cable supinated face pull is a horizontal rear-delt pull where the hands rotate into supination through the rep. You pull a rope or dual D-handles from a high pulley toward your eyes, twisting the palms up at the back so the thumbs end pointing behind you. That external rotation at the finish recruits the infraspinatus and teres minor on top of the rear delts. Few exercises do more for shoulder health, posture, and the rear half of the deltoid in one move.

How to do the cable supinated face pull

1
Set the pulley at eye level
Use a rope or two single D-handles attached just above eye height. Grip with thumbs up, palms facing each other.
2
Step back into tension
Take two steps back so the stack lifts off. Stagger the stance, soft knees, ribs over hips, chest tall.
3
Pull to the eyes, elbows high
Lead with the elbows wide and up, pulling the handles toward the outer eyes. Keep the chest open, shoulder blades sliding down and together.
4
Twist into supination
At the end of the pull, externally rotate the shoulders so the palms turn up and thumbs point behind you. Hold one beat, return slow.
Coach tip
Treat the rep like two moves stacked, the pull, then the twist. Don't rush the supination at the end, that's where the rotator cuff earns its money.

Common mistakes

  • Pulling with the biceps. If you feel the arms burning before the rear delts, the elbows are dropping. Drive elbows high and wide.
  • Too much weight. Heavy stacks force you to lean back and the rotation disappears. Keep the load light, the contraction strict.
  • Skipping the twist. Without external rotation at the back, it's a regular face pull. The supination is the whole point.
  • Hands too low. Pulling to the chin or chest turns it into a row. The rope must travel to eye height or higher.

Variations & progressions

Easier

Neutral-grip face pull

Skip the supination twist while you learn the elbow path. Same pull, palms stay neutral throughout.

Harder

Face pull with 3 s hold

Hold the supinated end position for three seconds each rep. Brutal time-under-tension for the rear delts and cuff.

No cable?

Band pull-apart with rotation

Use a light resistance band, pull apart at chest height, finish with a thumbs-back external rotation. Cheap and travel-friendly.

How to program it

Three protocols by goal. Pick one per cycle and aim for progression on load or distance.

GoalSets × DistanceLoadRest
Shoulder prehab3 × 15Very light45 s
Hypertrophy4 × 12-15Light to moderate60 s
Warm-up filler2 × 20Very light30 s
Log every rep

Add the cable supinated face pull to your ZON program

Track load, distance and progression in one timeline.

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Cable Supinated Face Pull FAQ

How often should I do face pulls?
Two to four times a week is the sweet spot. They are low cost, recover fast, and pair well with every pressing day as a warm-up or finisher. Three weekly sessions of 3 sets is enough to see posture and shoulder health improve within a month, even at very light loads.
Should the elbows be above or below the hands?
Elbows level with or slightly above the hands is the rear-delt position. If the elbows drop below the hands, the lats take over and the rear delts disengage. Cue chest tall, elbows high, like you are showing the gym your armpits at the back of the rep.
Is the supinated version really better?
It adds external rotation under load, which the standard face pull does not. EMG and clinical work both show stronger infraspinatus and teres minor activation with the twist. If your goal is bench press health and a fuller rear delt, the supinated version is the upgrade. The trade-off is you must use lighter weight to keep the rotation clean.
Cable Supinated Face Pull — Technique, muscles & programming | ZON