The armbar is the most fundamental joint lock in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. It targets the elbow using your entire body against your opponent's single arm, and it can be applied from nearly every position on the mat.
The armbar (also called juji gatame) is a joint lock that hyperextends the elbow. In Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, it is one of the first submissions you will learn and one that world champions still use at the highest levels of competition.
The mechanics are straightforward: you isolate one of your opponent's arms, control it between your legs with their thumb pointing up, and extend your hips into the elbow joint. Your legs clamp across their chest and head to prevent escape, while your entire body creates a lever system that puts immense pressure on the elbow. When applied correctly, the opponent must tap or risk serious injury to the joint.
What makes the armbar so effective is the mechanical advantage. Your legs and hips generate far more force than your opponent's single arm can resist. This is why the armbar works regardless of size or strength differences, making it a perfect technique for smaller practitioners.
The guard is one of the most common positions to attack the armbar. From closed guard, the basic setup follows these steps:
This version is taught in virtually every beginner BJJ curriculum because it teaches the core principles that apply to every armbar variation.
The mount position offers a dominant platform for the armbar. When you are on top, gravity works in your favor. The setup involves:
The mounted armbar is one of the highest-percentage submissions in BJJ because escaping mount is already difficult. Adding an armbar threat on top of that makes it extremely effective.
From side control, the armbar typically targets the near arm. You isolate the arm using a kimura grip or an Americana setup, then step over the head and transition into the armbar position. This version requires more precision because you are moving from a perpendicular angle, but it catches many opponents off guard because they are focused on escaping the pin rather than defending submissions.
Armbar defense is equally important to learn. The key principles are:
The most important rule: address the armbar early. Once your arm is fully extended with their hips lifted, the submission is nearly impossible to escape. Recognizing the threat before it is fully locked in gives you the best chance of defending.
The armbar appears at every level of Jiu-Jitsu, from your first week as a white belt to world championship finals. It teaches body mechanics, hip movement, and the concept of using leverage over strength. Learning the armbar also opens up a chain of related attacks: if your opponent defends the armbar, you can transition to a triangle choke, an omoplata, or sweep them. This interconnected attack system is what makes BJJ so effective and the armbar is often at the center of it.
At Current Jiu Jitsu, the armbar is introduced early in both gi and no-gi classes, and refined continuously as students progress through the belt ranks.
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The armbar is consistently one of the most common submissions in both gi and no-gi competition. It ranks alongside the rear naked choke and triangle choke as the three highest-finishing submissions across all levels of Jiu-Jitsu.
If you do not tap in time, the armbar can hyperextend or dislocate the elbow. However, in training, the armbar is applied slowly and your partner will always give you time to tap. Injuries from armbars are rare when both partners train responsibly and respect the tap.
The armbar is typically one of the first submissions taught to beginners, often within the first few weeks of training. At Current Jiu Jitsu, the armbar from closed guard is part of the foundational curriculum for all new students.
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