This site is under construction. Courses and content are being added!
← Calisthenics
Wall Handstand Push-Up

Wall Handstand Push-Up

The wall handstand push-up is the peak vertical push of bodyweight training. You kick up into a handstand against a wall, lower your head to the floor under control, and press back up — essentially a full overhead press with 100% of your bodyweight. Few exercises are as satisfying, and few build shoulder strength like this one does.

There are two common versions: facing away from the wall (easier to kick up, but you can arch your back to cheat) and facing toward the wall with belly on the wall (harder to kick up but enforces a clean, stacked handstand shape). Work toward the belly-to-wall version — it transfers directly to a freestanding handstand push-up later.

How to do it

Place a pillow or thin mat on the floor where your head will land. Kick up into a handstand against the wall, belly facing the wall if possible. Lock out your arms, squeeze everything, and keep your body in one long line heel-to-hand. Bend your elbows to lower the top of your head to the floor between your hands. Press back up to a full handstand lockout.

Target

3 sets of 5 reps with head touching the floor.

Key tips

  • Face the wall (belly in) for better form; face away for easier kick-ups while learning
  • Lower under control — don't just drop onto your head
  • Keep your core tight and body in one long straight line, don't banana-back
  • Place a folded mat, pillow, or pad under your head while learning the range
  • Bail safely: cartwheel out if you feel yourself falling, don't collapse onto your head

Progression

Before this: own 3×8 Elevated Pike Push-Ups at chair height first. Also drill 30–60 second wall handstand holds (belly-to-wall) to build comfort upside down.

Next step: once 3×5 wall HSPUs are clean, start working toward a freestanding handstand push-up: balance the handstand first, then eventually take it away from the wall.

Spotted an error or have ideas for this article?

Log in to suggest an edit

Log in →
Was this article helpful?

No comments yet. Be the first!