
Cable Pull-Through
Safety Rating for 40+
Benefits for 40+
The cable pull-through is one of the safest hinge exercises for those over 40: no axial weight on the spine, constant cable resistance through the full ROM, and minimal injury risk. It is perfect as a technique exercise for the hip hinge pattern that many over-40 trainees need to learn or rediscover. As glute activation before heavy compound exercises, it reduces injury risk.
Form Cues
- Rope at low cable, stand facing away from the tower, wide stance
- Hip hinge with straight back – let rope pull through the legs
- Explosively extend hips and squeeze glutes
Common Mistakes
- Pulling with the arms instead of extending the hips – the arms are just connectors
- Knees bend too much (squat instead of hinge) – misses the movement pattern
- Lumbar spine rounds in the starting position
- Too light weight without noticeable glute contraction at the end point
Modifications
Beginner
Start with very light weight, focusing on hip hinge technique. Alternatively: band pull-through as an entry if no cable machine is available.
For Joint Issues
For back issues: limit ROM and never allow back rounding. For wrist problems: use rope attachment instead of bar. This exercise is generally very joint-friendly.
Advanced
Pause variation with 3-second hold at maximum hip extension. Single-leg variation for increased gluteus medius activation. High volume (3–4 sets × 15–20 reps) as a finisher.
Scientific Basis
Perfect hinge pattern training without axial spinal loading. Constant cable resistance throughout full ROM. Ideal as a technique exercise for the hip hinge pattern and as glute activation before heavy compound hinge exercises.
Contraindications
- Very few contraindications – one of the safest hinge exercises
- Acute severe back pain with inability to move
- Acute groin complaints



