Intermediate 2 min read

Banded Wrist Distraction

Banded wrist distraction uses a resistance band to gap the wrist joint open while you work into flexion and extension. This mobilization improves front rack positions where full wrist extension under load is required, and it helps resolve stiffness from gripping and typing.

Setup

  1. Anchor a resistance band low. Loop it around the back of your wrist (just below the hand).
  2. Step away from the anchor until there is strong tension pulling your wrist into distraction (gapping the joint).
  3. With the band tensioned, place your palm flat on the floor or a box (fingers pointing away from the anchor) and lean into wrist extension.
  4. Oscillate gently, rocking forward and back to explore the range. Rotate your hand slightly to hit different angles.

Coaching Cues

What to feel:

  • A distraction (opening) sensation in the wrist joint
  • Improved ability to load wrist extension compared to without the band

Common mistakes:

  • Placing the band on the fingers rather than the wrist bones — it should wrap the carpals
  • Using too light a band that does not create meaningful distraction
  • Collapsing the forearm inward — keep the forearm aligned with the hand
Tip

Test your wrist extension range before and after this drill. Most people gain 5-10 degrees immediately, confirming that the restriction was joint capsule stiffness rather than muscle tightness.

Video and animated demos coming soon.

Programming

Parameter Recommendation
Hold time 30-60 seconds per wrist
Sets 2-3 per wrist
Frequency 3-5 times per week
When to do it Upper body focus, full mobility session, pre-front rack work

Progressions

  1. Beginner: Light band, gentle rocking into extension without full bodyweight.
  2. Intermediate: Moderate band, palm on floor, lean into full extension with oscillations.
  3. Advanced: Heavy band, explore flexion, extension, and radial/ulnar deviation under distraction; add light bodyweight loading.