Pike Push-Up
The pike push-up is the main stepping stone toward a handstand push-up — and by extension, toward every freestanding-handstand skill. You start in a push-up position on your toes, then walk your feet in toward your hands until your hips pike up high and your body forms a sharp inverted V. From that bent-over position, you lower your head to the floor and press back up.
Because a larger share of your bodyweight is over the shoulders in this position, pike push-ups demand serious overhead pressing strength. Treat it as the bridge between "I can press a little" (kneeling pike push-up) and "I can handstand push-up" (full HSPU): it's where you actually start to feel overhead strength stacking up.
How to do it
Start in a high plank. Walk your feet toward your hands until your hips are stacked almost directly over your shoulders and your body is in a tight inverted V. Keep your legs as straight as possible. Bend your elbows to lower the top of your head toward the floor between your hands, then press back up.
Target
3 sets of 10 reps with head lightly touching the floor.
Key tips
- The closer your feet are to your hands, the harder it gets
- Lower your head between your hands, not in front of them
- Keep your legs as straight as possible — bending hides the load
- Elbows track at roughly 45°, flaring slightly back in line with your torso
Progression
Before this: own 3×10 Kneeling Pike Push-Ups. From there, come onto your toes and walk your hands in slowly — one session at a time.
Next step: once 3×10 is smooth, elevate your feet on a box, chair, or bench. That's the Elevated Pike Push-Up in Level 4, and it's the final stop before wall handstand push-ups.