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Dip Bar for Calisthenics: Types, Height, Brands & Training

Guide to dip bars and parallel bars: standalone vs adjustable, best brands, how to choose. For dips, L-sit, and HSPU training.

What is a dip bar?

Dip bars (also called parallel bars or dip stands) are two parallel rails raised off the floor, designed primarily for dips and pressing movements. Unlike parallettes, which sit low to the ground (4 to 30 cm), dip bars are tall enough for full dips with legs hanging freely - typically 60 to 90 cm high. The extra height is the key difference.

Dip bar exercises

Dips are the primary use. The range of motion on standalone dip bars is typically better than on the integrated dip handles found on pull-up stations, because the width is adjustable on many models and you aren’t constrained by a fixed frame. Full-range dips, where the upper arm reaches parallel to the floor at the bottom, are more effective than partial reps and require enough depth to be possible.

L-sit progressions work well on dip bars. The height allows you to train the L-sit with hip flexor strength as the limiting factor, rather than wrist strength or ground clearance. Many people start L-sit training on parallettes and move to dip bars as compression strength improves.

Korean dips (a behind-the-body pressing movement that targets shoulder extension) are easier to set up on dedicated dip bars than on integrated stations. The parallel position and height give full shoulder extension range without obstruction.

Handstand push-up progressions also work. Some athletes use taller dip bars as a high-parallette variation for pike push-ups, deficit pressing, and HSPU negatives.

Straight-bar dips require a single horizontal bar at chest height rather than parallel bars. A sturdy pull-up bar at the right height handles that variation - standard parallel dip bars don’t apply.

Types of dip bars

Standalone dip barsAdjustable dip stationPull-up rack with dips
FootprintMediumMediumLarge
AdjustabilityFixed height and widthHeight and sometimes widthFixed dip handles
PortabilityModerateLowNot portable
PriceMediumMedium to highHigh
Best forDips and L-sit, compact spaceMultiple users or heightsFull home gym setup

How to choose

For dips and L-sit as the main use cases, standalone dip bars are the simplest and most space-efficient option. They take less room than a full power tower and are cheaper than adjustable stations.

Adjustable height matters if you share equipment with people of significantly different heights, or if you plan to use the bars for HSPU work at varying deficit depths. Most people at a fixed training height don’t need it.

Width adjustability is uncommon but worth looking for if you have specific shoulder width requirements. Standard fixed-width bars are typically 55 to 65 cm apart, which fits most people for regular dips.

If you already have a pull-up bar or power tower with integrated dip handles, those may be enough unless range of motion or width is a problem. The trade-off is usually less depth and fixed bar spacing.

Known brands

Gornation

German brand. Their Premium Dip Bars are steel-framed standalone stations with a powder-coated finish and rubber feet for floor protection. Stable under heavy use and rated for high loads. Available in standard height. Ships across Europe.

Gornation Premium Dip Bars - black powder-coated steel standalone parallel bars

Gorletic

Spanish brand with a wooden dip bar design: birch plywood frame with a rounded wooden grip rail. Lighter than steel alternatives and better grip texture when hands are dry. Available in a tall configuration suited for full dips. Ships from Spain across Europe.

Gorletic wooden dip bars - birch plywood frame with rounded wooden grip rail

Caliathletics

Polish brand. Their adjustable steel dip station uses a telescopic height mechanism with locking knobs, covering both bar height and grip height independently. More adjustability than most comparably priced options. Available in multiple configurations.

Caliathletics adjustable steel dip station - telescopic height with locking knobs

Technique

Grip the bars with hands neutral (thumbs pointing forward). At the bottom of a dip, keep elbows tracking back and slightly flared - not pointing straight out to the sides. Leaning slightly forward shifts emphasis to the chest; staying upright targets the triceps more.

For L-sit, press firmly into the bars to lift the hips, then engage the hip flexors to raise the legs. Most people start with a bent-knee tuck before attempting a full L-sit with legs extended.

The most common dip error is partial range - stopping before the upper arm reaches parallel. Full-range dips take longer to build strength for but produce more consistent results over time.

FAQ

Dip bars vs parallettes?

Height is the main difference. Parallettes sit close to the floor (4 to 30 cm) and are best for planche, L-sit, and push-up work. Dip bars are tall enough for full dips with legs hanging free. If you train both skills, you want both pieces of equipment.

How wide should dip bars be?

Shoulder-width is the standard, typically 55 to 65 cm. Wider bars allow more range of motion at the shoulder but increase joint stress. Start at shoulder-width and adjust if needed.

Can I use dip bars for pull-ups?

No. Dip bars are parallel and sit at chest height, not overhead. For pull-ups and hanging work, you need a bar at full-arm overhead height.

Dip bars vs power tower?

Power towers combine pull-up, dip, and sometimes row in one unit but take significantly more floor space and cost more. Standalone dip bars are simpler and cheaper if dips and L-sits are the main goals and you already have a pull-up bar elsewhere.

What height should dip bars be?

Tall enough to hang your legs freely at the bottom of a dip without touching the floor. For most people, 70 to 80 cm bar height works. If you’re taller, look for stations with height adjustment.