David Otey, C.S.C.S, is a member of the Men's Health Advisory Board.

UNLESS YOU'RE A HIGH-LEVEL athlete, your workouts are probably not quite as balanced as they should be to achieve the most common goals of the gym-going everyman: looking swole and feeling good. Lots of guys go about achieving those ends by using the mirror as their guide, which results in training sessions filled exclusively with exercises focused on the shoulders, arms, chest, and abs as they strive to make every muscle they can see in their reflection grow. In practice, however, that type of approach will set you up for failure, since they're lacking balance. In order to build a truly strong and aesthetically pleasing physique, you need to train your back, too. And one of the most important muscles in the group, the lats, should be one of your main focal points.

The lats—shorthand for their proper anatomical moniker, the latissimus dorsi—are the wide, fan-shaped muscles that make up much of your mid-back region. Your lats are the biggest muscles in your upper body, and combine with the traps in your upper back to form the "V" shape essential for the highly-desired "V-taper" torso. If your fitness goal is to achieve the most commonly-held aesthetic standard, you'll need to train your lats.

The lats are important for more than just achieving a physique goal; the muscles are responsible for an essential function for work, play, and everything in between: pulling. Whenever you're performing a pulling movement, whether you're doing rows in the weight room or hauling a heavy bag of pet food out of your car's trunk, you're using your lats—so it pays to understand a little bit more about these important muscles.

The key, then, is finding the best exercises to keep your lat workouts engaging so you don't succumb to the temptation to skip out on the muscle group. Here's how to stay on track to building up a big back.

What Are Your Lats?

In order to work your lats you have to understand them at least a little: They’re the large, triangle-shaped muscles on the back, which create a thick taper from shoulder to waist.

labeled anatomy chart of male lower back muscles on black background
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The muscle inserts into the upper part of the humerus (your upper arm bone) from the inside. Their purpose is main two-fold: Your lats primarily work when you pull things, and when you adduct things. What’s adduction? Raise your arms out to your sides, forming a “T” with your torso. Now lower them forcefully back to your sides. That forceful lowering action is adduction.

How to Train Your Lats

This all means that traditional rowing motions with your arms by your sides pulling straight back will impact your lats. Get too wide with your grip on a row though, and you begin to see more involvement from the rear deltoid and middle traps.

Researchers have also found there could be some mild advantages from pulling with a medium grip width specifically in the vertical plane. In both the upward and downward path of the movement there were some small advantages from a muscular recruitment standpoint the the medium grip which seemed to be just right.

The Benefits of Strengthening Your Lats

Training your lats will pay off in a number of ways. Functionally, strong lats mean you'll perform better when it comes to pulling exercises—and that's not just upper body moves like rows and pullups. You'll find your deadlift is even stronger, too.

You'll also benefit aesthetically. Training your lats can help you achieve the V-taper torso, a major goal for lots of guys. Like other back muscles, a well-developed set of lats will also help to balance out your physique and can even contribute to better posture, especially if you're in danger of having an imbalance with too much focus on the anterior chain (front facing muscles like the chest).

The 16 Best Lats Exercises

Now let’s get right into the best lat moves out there. Make sure you’re hitting two or three of these moves at least once a week to round out your physique.

Deadlifts

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The classic barbell deadlift is often thought of as a hamstring and glute developer, but it’ll smoke your lats too. Think about it: Whether you’re lifting or lowering that barbell with a heavy weight, it’s hanging from your arms, and your back muscles have to pull. Don’t underrate this move as a foundation of a solid back.

How to:

  • Load a barbell with weight on the ground and stand close to it, so it nearly touches your shins. Grasp it with an overhand, slightly-wider-than-shoulder-width grip.
  • With feet shoulder-width apart and arms just outside of the legs, push the hips back as far as possible then bend the knee far enough to reach the bar.
  • From the bottom position with a tall spine, pull the bar from the ground by standing tall and pulling the hips back to your standing position. Throughout the movement, it's important to maintain a strong posture.
  • Descend down controlling the bar back down to the ground.

Barbell Row

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Fixed moves with both arms can maximize the amount of weight that can move. This move is a staple in most bodybuilders, athletes, and probably your routine by this point.

The great thing about the barbell row is, due to required stability in the spine and core muscles (keeping a neutral spine) and isometric hamstring activity (hinging the hips in a bent position), the action becomes a global pull exercise," says athlete performance and development specialist Curtis Shannon, C.S.C.S. "I personally love programming this exercise due to all the benefits the rows have on the posterior chain, as well as the added benefits of improvement of strength and hypertrophy."

The movement is versatile, too. "You can program this as a primary or accessory movement or add as a superset exercise," Shannon continues. "Depending on the weight and readiness of the athlete, avoid keeping moderate to heavy lifts under ten reps. Being bent over moving the weight can put added pressure on the lower back, especially if we are already, or begin to, fatigue."

How to:

  • Stand next to a loaded barbell set on the ground. Bend your knees slightly and hinge forward so your torso is slightly higher than parallel to the ground, then grab the barbell using an overhand, shoulder-width grip. Look down, not forward. Tighten your core. Hinge upwards, raising your torso to a 45-degree angle with the ground and lifting the barbell. This is the starting position.
  • Keeping your core tight and your shoulder blades squeezed, bend your elbows and pull the barbell to your lower chest. Aim to keep your elbows at a 45-degree angle relative to your torso as you do this, and try to touch the bar to your ribcage.
  • Lower to the start with control. That's 1 rep.

Dumbbell Row

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This is one of the first variations novice lifters learn. You simply hinge forward, place one arm on a bench or rack for balance, and grasp a dumbbell in the other arm. Keep your torso steady as you bend your elbow and use your back muscles to pull the dumbbell up toward your ribcage. Dumbbell rows involve a host of back muscles, but if you want to focus on your lats here, aim to get a good stretch at the bottom of the motion.

How to:

  • Start standing, holding a single dumbbell in your right hand. Now hinge forward until your torso is nearly parallel with the ground. Keep your core tight and your feet shoulder-width apart as you do this.
  • Place your left hand on a box or bench for balance. This is the start.
  • Pull the dumbbell back to just above your belly button, then slowly return it back to the start.

Incline Dumbbell Row

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You've already seen how valuable dumbbell rows can be for your lats–now, introduce another implement (an adjustable bench) to eliminate your ability to cheat the movement by using momentum or flagging posture. With your chest on the bench, all you can do is pull. This will hit your lower lats, which are sometimes neglected during other pulling movements.

How to:

  • Adjust a bench to a 45-degree angle. Place your chest on the bench, but plant your feet as if you're standing up, not only leaning on the bench. Engage your abs and glutes to maintain full-body tension.
  • Lift the weights, gripping them tightly, and keep your neck in a neutral position by gazing straight ahead.
  • Pull from the upper arm, driving the weight up toward your torso. Squeeze your back for a count at the top, then control the weight back down.

Elevated Plank Row

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Use the bench to train your lats in a different way—and get your core more involved too. You'll give the lats and mid back plenty of valuable work, if you position yourself properly.

How to:

  • Set up in a single arm plank on the bench, with your legs spread wide and your elbow in front of you in an externally rotated position.
  • Lift the dumbbell, keeping your hips low by tightening your glutes and obliques.
  • Row the weight up to a parallel position relative to your torso, pause and squeeze the back, then lower back down.

Reeves Incline Row

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Another advanced bench row swaps your dumbbells for an EZ bar or shorter barbell so you can take a new grip. This incline row allows you to pull from a wider position, giving your muscles a different stimulus.

How to:

  • Start with your chest on an incline bench, a loaded EZ curl bar (or barbell) beneath the bench.
  • Grasp the bar by the plates. Lift it from the ground. Tighten your shoulder blades.
  • Row the bar up, touching the bar to the bench, then lower.

Gorilla Row

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This bent-over row variation challenges you to work from a wide stance, while also giving you a chance to ease some of the tension you feel in your lower back during a traditional bent-over row by pulling from a dead stop from the floor.

How to:

  • Stand in an athletic stance as you would for a bent over row, then widen your feet slightly, and tighten core and glutes, making sure hips are lower than shoulders.
  • Grip the weights tightly in both hands. Maintain this position.
  • Keeping your shoulders level with the ground, row the right weight upwards, pressing the other weight into the ground.
  • Repeat on the other side.

Pullups and Chinups

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The pull-up and the chin-up are well-known moves, and staples for lat development. Both moves are simple: You hang from a bar, with an overhand grip (pull-ups) or an underhand grip (chin-ups), and pull your chest to the bar. To really hit your lats, avoid the so-called “kip,” a CrossFit idea that has you explosively swinging your hips to create momentum that drives your chest to the bar. Work up to 3 sets of 10.

How to:

  • Hang from a pullup bar with an overhand (pullup) or underhand (chinup) grip, hands about shoulder-width apart.
  • Keeping your core tight, bend at the elbows and shoulders and pull your chest to the bar.
  • Pause, then lower with control.

Lat Pulldowns

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The lat pulldown is a cousin of pullups and chinups, and it definitely seems similar. But we’re giving it its own spot here because of how it lets you focus in on your lats. Freed of grip concerns and the need to manage your lower body perfectly, you can really focus in on your lats and finish off every rep with a good squeeze.

Be strategic once you start adding the pulldown to your workouts. "This exercise can be programmed as a superset to an upper body push exercise," says Shannon "It can be programmed as a progressive exercise to help advance to wide grip pull ups. And lastly, used as an activation exercise to help get the lat muscles 'firing'."

How to:

  • Sit in a lat pulldown station and grab the bar above with a grip slightly wider than shoulder-width. Tighten your core and keep your torso upright.
  • Pull the bar down toward your chest, bending at your elbows and squeezing your shoulder blades.
  • Slowly return the bar to the top of the station.

"The key to getting the biggest 'bang for your buck' is keeping your torso not completely erect, but at about a 60 percent angle," says Shannon. "As well as focusing on tempo and control to get that concentric (lowering the bar) and eccentric (raising the bar) effect."

You can also try a kneeling variation, shown in the video above.

Close-Grip Lat Pulldown

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Switch up the handle and narrow your grip for this pulldown variation, which allows you to increase the range of motion of your pull. This will also provide a safer position for your shoulders—especially if you can use a V-bar, as is demonstrated in the video.

How to:

  • Set seat at a comfortable height. Grab the handle, using a neutral grip if it's a V-handle or an underhand grip for the more standard wide bar.
  • Plant your feet on the ground, engage your core, and squeeze the bar tight.
  • Lean back slightly, then squeeze your shoulders and drive them down as you pull. Drive your elbows down as you pull the bar to the top of your chest.
  • Hold at the bottom, then return to start position under control.

Landmine Row

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The landmine row has a lot in common with the barbell row, except the angle of your pull is slightly different. The landmine row, with the barbell anchored behind you, lets you get more of a squeeze with your lats. And because it’s anchored, you cheat less and squeeze a little bit more.

How to:

  • Set a barbell in a landmine and place some weight on the opposite end of the barbell.
  • Wrap a V-bar handle around the weighted end and grasp its handles.
  • Hinge forward so your torso is at a 45-degree angle with the ground; this is the start.
  • Squeeze your shoulder blades and row the weighted end of the barbell toward your chest; pause, then return to the start.

Dumbbell Pullover

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The dumbbell pullover is viewed as a chest exercise by some, and it’ll hit your abs considerably too. But as you pull the weight back above your torso, your upper arms mimic a row motion. And the best part comes before that: your lats wind up getting a great stretch as you lower the weight.

How to:

  • Lie with your back on a bench, holding a single dumbbell overhead with both hands, gripping the weight instead of the bar.
  • Keep your arms straight as you lower the weight in an arc behind your head.
  • Once you feel a stretch in your chest, pause, then pull it back to the starting position.
  • As you pull it back, your lats come into play, driving the motion. Think 3 sets of 8 to 10 reps here.

Meadows Row

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The brainchild of bodybuilder John Meadows, the Meadows row has you approaching the landmine from a different angle for a vicious single-arm row. The angle forces the resistance to travel both up and away, challenging you to pull explosively near the top.

How to:

  • Stand next to a landmine, facing away, your outside leg about 6 inches from the end of the barbell and your back leg in a staggered stance behind you.
  • Hinge forward so your torso is at a 45-degree angle to the ground, and rest your outside hand on your outside leg.
  • Grip the bar with an overhand grip with your inside hand. Tighten your core.
  • Now row the bar to the bottom of your chest. Squeeze. Lower with control.

Renegade Row

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This CrossFit staple lets you train your lats while building shoulder stability at the same time. It’ll also challenge your core. You’ll find yourself using lighter weights than you might on other motions, too, which means you’ll have a good opportunity to finish each rep with a squeeze. Just sit this one out if you have shoulder issues.

How to:

  • Get in pushup position, with your hands on a pair of dumbbells in a neutral grip, and your feet about shoulder-width apart. Do a pushup.
  • As you raise your torso, lift one dumbbell off the ground and row it toward your belly button; you’ll need to support your weight with your other shoulder.
  • Return to the pushup position, then lift and row the other dumbbell.
  • Alternate the first dumbbell you row with during every pushup rep.

Inverted Bodyweight Row

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This row has you lying underneath a bar, tightening your entire torso, then rowing your chest to the bar. It’ll challenge your abs and glutes, but expect it to be hard. The good news: It’s an incredibly scale-able bodyweight move: Make it easier by raising the bar higher and assuming a position closer to standing. Or make it easier by bending your knees and planting your heels into the floor (instead of maintaining a fully straight line from shoulders through feet).

How to:

  • Lie under a barbell or Smith machine and grab the bar with an underhand grip slightly wider than shoulder-width. Position your feet and torso so that you’re at a 45-degree angle with the ground. Squeeze your shoulder blades.
  • Now pull your torso and body upwards, aiming to touch the bar between belly button and chest.
  • Lower back to the start. That’s 1 rep.

Pendlay/Deadstop Row

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The deadstop row is similar to the barbell row, except after each rep, you lower the bar all the way to the ground, bringing it to a dead stop. This gives you a chance to reset your form and tighten your core, and if you struggle with grip strength on the barbell row, it gives your forearms a break. The result: You move more weight, but without sacrificing form or risking injury.

How to:

  • Setup for this is very similar to a barbell row. Once again, you stand next to a loaded barbell set on the ground. Bend your knees slightly and hinge forward so your torso is slightly higher than parallel to the ground, then grab the barbell using an overhand, shoulder-width grip. Look down, not forward. Tighten your core, and make sure your hips are slightly lower than your shoulders.
  • Keeping your core tight and your shoulder blades squeezed, bend your elbows and pull the barbell to your lower chest.
  • Aim to keep your elbows at a 45-degree angle relative to your torso as you do this, and try to touch the bar to your ribcage.
  • Lower the barbell all the way to the ground, and let it come to rest (a dead stop) on the ground, then begin the next rep.
Headshot of David Otey, C.S.C.S.
David Otey, C.S.C.S.

David Otey, CSCS is a fitness writer, NYC-based strength coach, and Men's Health Advisory Board member who specializes in strength and hypertrophy protocols as well as athletic performance. For more on Otey check out www.oteyfitness.com.

Headshot of Brett Williams, NASM

Brett Williams, a fitness editor at Men's Health, is a NASM-CPT certified trainer and former pro football player and tech reporter who splits his workout time between strength and conditioning training, martial arts, and running. You can find his work elsewhere at Mashable, Thrillist, and other outlets.