Intermediate

Closed Position

Intermediate Level

Going deeper — techniques and nuances for experienced dancers

Closed position is the home base of bachata — where two bodies become one unit, communication travels through the chest, and the dance gets real.

Intermediate focus

Learn to vary your closed position dynamically. Tighter for slow, intimate sections; slightly looser for turns and transitions. Your right hand (leader) becomes an incredibly precise communication tool — a slight press between the shoulder blades initiates a body wave, a gentle lift signals a cambré. The position should feel like a conversation, not a cage.

Tips

  • The quality of your closed position with a stranger in the first 4 counts tells them everything about what kind of dancer you are. Make those counts count.
  • Practice closed position basic step with your eyes closed. If you're truly connected through the torso, you'll move as one without visual cues.

Common mistakes

  • Leader placing the hand too low on the back — below the bra line sends the wrong message and reduces lead clarity
  • Gripping the partner with the arms instead of connecting through the core — your arms should be toned but never tense
  • Leaning into the partner for support rather than standing on your own axis and choosing to connect

Practice drill

With a partner, dance two full songs in closed position only — no open breaks, no turns, nothing but basic step and simple weight shifts. Focus on making the connection comfortable and communicative. If you get bored, you're not going deep enough into the subtleties of the connection.

Related terms