Program Overview
This 4-week dead hang program turns a zero-second hang into a solid 30-second hold. You train 3 days per week with 3 sets per session. Each week adds 5 seconds of hang time per set.
Total weekly training time stays under 10 minutes. The program works for anyone who can grip a bar for at least 1 second. No previous training experience required.
| Detail | Specification |
|---|---|
| Goal | 30-second dead hang |
| Duration | 4 weeks |
| Frequency | 3 sessions per week |
| Sets per Session | 3 |
| Rest Between Sets | 90 seconds |
| Grip | Double overhand, shoulder width |
Before You Start
Equipment Needed
A pull-up bar that holds your full body weight is the only requirement. Doorframe bars, wall-mounted bars, or gym pull-up stations all work. Read the how to dead hang guide for setup details.
Optional additions include chalk for sweaty hands and a timer app on your phone. A yoga mat underneath cushions your landing when you drop.
Baseline Test
Grip the bar with a double overhand grip at shoulder width. Hang with straight arms and start your timer. Hold until your grip fails. Record that number in seconds. This is your Week 1 starting point.
Score under 5 seconds? Start with the regression exercises in the beginner dead hang guide for 1-2 weeks before beginning this program.
Week 1: Foundation
Week 1 establishes your baseline volume and locks in proper dead hang form. Every set uses your current max hold time from the baseline test. Do not push beyond that number this week.
Session Structure
- Set 1: Hang for your baseline max time
- Rest: 90 seconds
- Set 2: Hang for your baseline max time
- Rest: 90 seconds
- Set 3: Hang for your baseline max time (or until failure)
Form Checklist
Grip the bar with thumbs wrapped around it. Keep arms fully extended. Pack your shoulders down slightly away from your ears. Breathe steadily through the nose. Look straight ahead or slightly down.
Week 1 sets often feel easy on the first two sets. The third set reveals your true capacity. Record all three times.
Week 2: Building Endurance
Add 5 seconds to each set compared to your Week 1 times. If you held 10 seconds in Week 1 then target 15 seconds per set in Week 2.
Key Focus
Grip fatigue hits harder this week. Your forearms may burn earlier in each set. Keep breathing steady and maintain shoulder position. Do not let your shoulders shrug up toward your ears.
The third set becomes genuinely difficult. Falling 2-3 seconds short of target is acceptable. Record your actual times and aim for full target times by Friday.
Week 3: Pushing Through
Add another 5 seconds per set on top of Week 2. Your target sets now run 10 seconds longer than your original baseline.
Introduce Grip Variety
On one session this week swap your overhand grip for a neutral grip (palms facing each other) if your bar allows it. Neutral grip gives your fingers and forearms a slightly different stimulus. Return to overhand for the other two sessions.
Mental resistance appears this week. Your brain signals fatigue before your grip actually fails. Practice breathing through the discomfort. Focus on one breath at a time instead of watching the clock.
Week 4: Testing
The final week builds toward a max test on the last session.
Sessions 1 and 2
Perform your normal 3 sets at Week 3 target times. Keep form strict. These sessions maintain volume without draining you before the final test.
Session 3: Max Test Day
- Warm up with 2 easy hangs at 50% of your max for 10-15 seconds each
- Rest 2-3 minutes
- Grip the bar and hang for absolute maximum time
- Record your result
Target: 30 seconds or longer. Most people following this program hit 25-35 seconds on test day. Celebrate the progress from Day 1 to now.
Hit 30 seconds? You qualify for the 8-week intermediate program. Fell short? Repeat Weeks 3-4 of this program until you reach 30 seconds.
Daily Schedule
Follow this Monday/Wednesday/Friday schedule. Shift the days if needed but always leave one rest day between sessions.
| Week | Monday | Wednesday | Friday |
|---|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | 3 × baseline max, 90s rest | 3 × baseline max, 90s rest | 3 × baseline max, 90s rest |
| Week 2 | 3 × (baseline + 5s), 90s rest | 3 × (baseline + 5s), 90s rest | 3 × (baseline + 5s), 90s rest |
| Week 3 | 3 × (baseline + 10s), 90s rest | 3 × (baseline + 10s), neutral grip, 90s rest | 3 × (baseline + 10s), 90s rest |
| Week 4 | 3 × Week 3 target, 90s rest | 3 × Week 3 target, 90s rest | 2 warm-up hangs + 1 max test |
Sample Schedule for a 10-Second Baseline
| Week | Target Per Set | Total Hang Time Per Session |
|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | 10 seconds | 30 seconds |
| Week 2 | 15 seconds | 45 seconds |
| Week 3 | 20 seconds | 60 seconds |
| Week 4 | 20 seconds (test day: max) | 60 seconds + max |
What Comes Next
A 30-second dead hang marks the transition from beginner to intermediate level. Two paths open up from here.
Path 1: 8-Week Intermediate Program
The 8-week intermediate dead hang program pushes your hold to 60-90 seconds. It adds a fourth weekly session and introduces underhand and neutral grip rotations. This is the direct next step for most trainees.
Path 2: Maintain and Integrate
Keep your 30-second hold with 2 sessions per week at 3 sets each. Integrate dead hangs as a warm-up for climbing, CrossFit, or general gym training. Return to the training programs page when ready to progress further.
Related Guides
Sources & References
- Bohannon, R.W. (2019). Grip strength: An indispensable biomarker for older adults. Clinical Interventions in Aging, 14, 1681-1691.
- Leong, D.P. et al. (2015). Prognostic value of grip strength. The Lancet, 386(9990), 266-273.
- Kirby, R.L. et al. (1981). Flexibility and musculoskeletal symptomatology. Journal of Sports Medicine.
- American College of Sports Medicine. (2021). ACSM's Guidelines for Exercise Testing and Prescription. 11th edition.