The tuck front lever is T4 in the Masters series — horizontal body support from a bar with the body below the bar and hips/knees tucked. It’s the direct pulling complement to the tuck planche: where the planche requires horizontal pushing strength and protraction, the front lever requires horizontal pulling strength and retraction with full-body tension.
Prerequisites
The front lever requires: L-sit pull-up strength (compression plus pulling), wide-grip pull-up capacity (the lat loading angle), and the straight-arm pulling strength from archer pull-up work. The front lever is primarily a straight-arm exercise — the elbows are locked during the hold, which shifts load from biceps to the shoulder girdle and lats.
Building the Hold
Tuck front lever rows. From a dead hang, pull your body to the tuck front lever position (tucked knees, body horizontal) and lower back. This is the concentric that builds the position.
Tuck front lever holds. Hold the position isometrically for 5–10 seconds after reaching it. Build hold time over weeks.
One-leg extension. From the tuck hold, extend one leg — the half-tuck front lever. This increases the lever arm and directly precedes the straddle and full positions.
Full Front Lever Timeline
From first tuck front lever hold to full front lever: 1–2 years of consistent training. The progression moves through: tuck → one-leg extended → straddle → full. Each step doubles the difficulty. T5 mastery territory.
Move. Groove. Repeat. Smooth.
← Tuck Planche | Next: Muscle-Up Rings →
Move. Groove. Repeat. Smooth.
You're on your way. And we're here with you.