Seated Cable Row
A horizontal cable pull that hammers the mid-back with constant tension, no lower-back risk, and clean technique even when fatigued.

What is the seated cable row?
The seated cable row is a horizontal pull where you sit with feet braced and pull a handle to your lower ribs. It targets the mid-back, rhomboids, rear delts and biceps. Compared to a barbell row, the cable keeps tension across the whole range and removes spinal loading, which makes it a safer day-to-day driver of back volume. It pairs well with deadlifts and pull-ups inside a complete pulling program.
How to do the seated cable row
Common mistakes
- Rowing with the lower back. Big sway from hips trades back muscle for spinal stress. Lock the torso angle.
- Elbows flaring. Elbows out hits more rear delts and less lat. For mid-back focus, keep elbows tracking close.
- Short range of motion. Half-reps from chest to chest. Reach forward fully and pull to the lower ribs every time.
- Rounded back at the stretch. Reaching forward by rounding the spine loads the lower back. Hinge from the hips instead.
Variations & progressions
Chest-supported row
Use a chest-supported row machine to remove the lower back from the equation and focus purely on the pull.
Single-arm seated cable row
Use a D-handle, one arm at a time. Longer range, more rotation, no help from the dominant side.
Dumbbell or barbell row
Switch to a chest-supported dumbbell row or a Pendlay row. Same pattern, free-weight loading.
How to program it
Three protocols by goal. Pick one per cycle and aim for progression on load or distance.
| Goal | Sets × Distance | Load | Rest |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hypertrophy | 4 × 10-12 | 65-75% 1RM | 90 s |
| Strength | 5 × 5 | 80-85% 1RM | 2-3 min |
| Back finisher | 3 × 15-20 | 50-60% 1RM | 60 s |
Add the seated cable row to your ZON program
Track load, distance and progression in one timeline.



