AcademyFiguresOutside Turn

Outside Turn

FiguresBeginnerAll partner dance

A turn where the follower rotates outward, away from the leader — the bold, expansive turn that opens up space and possibilities.

Why it matters

The outside turn is probably the most common turn in all of partner dance. It's in salsa, bachata, kizomba, zouk — everywhere. Master it and you've unlocked a universal movement that transfers across every dance floor on the planet.

The outside turn sends the follower spinning away from the leader — typically a clockwise rotation for the follower. It's the more dramatic cousin of the inside turn: bigger, more visible, and with more centrifugal energy. The outside turn naturally opens the partnership up, creating space for styling, transitions, and re-entries.

Tips

  • Practice solo: stand on one foot, push off with the other, and try to complete one full rotation. If you can't do it alone, working with a partner won't fix it.
  • The prep matters more than the turn. A clear 'hey, we're about to turn' signal makes everything smoother.

Common mistakes

  • Too much arm force — turns should feel effortless
  • Follower looking down during the turn
  • Not spotting — causes dizziness and loss of orientation
  • Leader pulling the follower off-balance by keeping tension after releasing

Practice drill

With a partner: basic step, outside turn, basic step, outside turn. 20 repetitions. Then upgrade: basic step, double outside turn. Focus on smooth entry and exit, not speed.

The science

Outside turns generate centrifugal force that naturally pulls the follower away from the leader. The follower must create centripetal force through their core to maintain the turn radius — this is why core engagement matters more than arm strength.

Sources: Physics of rotational motion in dance · Turn technique fundamentals