Can pull-ups be done with a towel or without a bar?

on May 08 2026

The Short Answer: Yes, but not the same way-and not without serious caveats. Let's break down what "pull-ups without a bar" actually means, what you gain, what you lose, and how to train smart regardless of your gear.

You're asking this for a reason. Maybe you're traveling. Maybe your space is limited. Maybe you're tired of door-mounted bars that wobble or damage your frame. Whatever the case, the goal is the same: build real pulling strength without excuses.

Let's get into it.

1. The Towel Pull-Up: A Grip Game-Changer (Not a Bar Substitute)

Yes, you can loop a towel over a sturdy pull-up bar, grab each end, and pull yourself up. This is a legitimate variation used by climbers, military personnel, and strength athletes. But here's the truth: it's not a substitute for a bar-it's a different exercise.

What it trains:

  • Grip strength (especially crushing and pinch grip)
  • Forearm endurance
  • Neuromuscular coordination under unstable load

What it doesn't train:

  • Consistent scapular retraction (the towel shifts, so your back works differently)
  • Full lat activation (the unstable grip changes the angle of pull)
  • Progressive overload (you can't easily add weight or vary grip width)

How to do it safely:

  1. Use a thick, non-slip towel (a standard gym towel or combat towel works).
  2. Loop it over a sturdy, fixed bar (NOT a door frame or flimsy mount).
  3. Grab each end, palms facing each other.
  4. Pull until your chin clears the towel knot.
  5. Lower with control.

Verdict: Effective for grip and variety. But if your goal is building a wide, strong back, you're better off with a bar.

2. No Bar at All? Yes, But You're Now Doing "Pull-Up Alternatives"

Without a bar, you can't do a true pull-up. But you can train the same movement patterns and muscle groups using:

A. Door Frame Rows (Inverted Rows)

  • Find a sturdy door frame (check for damage risk).
  • Grab the edges at chest height.
  • Walk your feet out and lean back.
  • Pull your chest to the frame.

B. Table Rows

  • Lie under a heavy, fixed table.
  • Grab the edge, keep your body straight, and pull your chest to the underside.

C. Floor Sliders or Towel Slides

  • On a smooth floor, place a towel under each hand.
  • Start in a plank, then pull your hands toward your chest (like a row).

D. Resistance Band Rows

  • Anchor a band to a sturdy point (door anchor, heavy furniture).
  • Perform seated or standing rows.

E. Isometric Holds (If You Have a Bar)

  • Jump or step into a pull-up top position.
  • Hold for 5-10 seconds.
  • Lower slowly (3-5 seconds).

F. Eccentric Negatives (Best Bar-Free Option)

  • Use a chair or box to get your chin over a bar.
  • Lower yourself as slowly as possible (5-10 seconds).
  • Repeat.

Warning: None of these replicate the full scapular retraction, lat activation, or progressive loading of a bar pull-up. They are supplements, not replacements.

3. The Real Problem: "No Bar" Usually Means "No Consistency"

Most people who ask this question aren't looking for a towel tutorial. They're looking for a way to train pull-ups without owning a pull-up bar. And that's where the real issue lives.

The barrier isn't your space. It's your gear.

If you're using a door-mounted bar that wobbles, damages your frame, or limits your grip width, you're already compromising. If you're skipping pull-ups because your bar is bulky, permanent, or doesn't fit your apartment, you're letting equipment dictate your progress.

The solution isn't a towel. It's a bar you can trust.

4. What to Look for in a Pull-Up Bar (If You're Serious)

If you want to build consistent pulling strength, you need a bar that:

  • Doesn't damage your home (no door-mounted wobble)
  • Fits your space (compact, foldable, no permanent installation)
  • Handles real weight (military-tested steel, not flimsy aluminum)
  • Lets you vary grip (wide, close, neutral, mixed)

That's where a freestanding, foldable, heavy-duty bar like the BULLBAR comes in. It's built for those who refuse to compromise-whether you're in a studio apartment, a hotel room, or a deployment tent. It folds to the size of a carry-on, supports over 350 lbs, and gives you a stable, slip-resistant base that protects your floors.

No excuses. No damage. No compromise.

5. The Bottom Line

  • Can you do pull-ups with a towel? Yes-as a grip variation, not a primary back builder.
  • Can you do pull-ups without a bar? Not true pull-ups. But alternatives exist.
  • Should you rely on these methods long-term? Only if you're okay with slower progress and incomplete back development.

The real question isn't "Can I do pull-ups without a bar?"
It's "Am I willing to get a bar that works for my space?"

If you're serious about strength, you don't need a warehouse. You need a tool that matches your discipline.

Train anywhere. Store anywhere. Build strength without limits.

- Your coach, BullBar

BULLBAR 2.0 EXT (Height adjustable)

BULLBAR 2.0 EXT (Height adjustable)

£520.00

BULLBAR 2.0 EXT (Height adjustable)

BULLBAR 2.0 EXT (Height adjustable)

£520.00