The signature BJJ choke from the guard. Use your legs to form a triangle around the neck and one arm.
The triangle choke (sankaku-jime) is one of BJJ's most iconic techniques. You use your legs to form a triangular shape around your opponent's neck and one arm, cutting off blood flow to the brain and forcing a tap.
The triangle is particularly effective from the closed guard and became a defining BJJ weapon after legends like Rickson Gracie and Marcelo Garcia popularized it in competition.
Despite looking flashy, the triangle is fundamentally a pressure choke that relies on correct angles and squeeze — not leg strength.
Follow these steps to execute the Triangle Choke correctly. Every step matters — skipping one leads to a failed attempt.
Control your opponent's posture and grips. Open your closed guard with a specific plan — the triangle requires an open guard setup.
Push one of their arms across the centerline while controlling the wrist of the other. One arm in, one arm out is the triangle setup.
Shoot your leg over the shoulder on the side where the arm is trapped inside. The shin goes across the back of the opponent's neck.
Hook your other leg under the first leg's knee. Grip your own shin to create structural lock. Your legs form a closed triangle.
Pivot your hips perpendicular to the opponent. Angle is everything — without it, the triangle does not work regardless of leg strength.
Pull the head down with both hands, squeeze the knees together, and push your hips up. The choke finishes through the arm compressing the carotid.
These are the most common errors people make when attempting the Triangle Choke. Recognize them in your own game and fix them systematically.
Triangles finished from perfectly square positions almost never work. You need an angle for the choke to compress correctly.
Fix: Pivot hips 45 to 90 degrees before applying pressure.
If both arms are out, your opponent can posture and escape easily.
Fix: Always secure the arm across the centerline before throwing the leg.
An unlocked triangle lets the opponent stack and pass your guard. The lock must be solid.
Fix: Hook the leg behind the knee immediately and grip your shin to reinforce.
If the opponent stacks you vertically, gravity works against you.
Fix: Create the angle early and keep your hips lower than your shoulders relative to the opponent.
The Triangle Choke is a intermediate-level technique that is tested and refined at different stages of belt progression. White belts learn the mechanics, blue belts refine the setups, and purple belts integrate it into complex chains.
Mastery of core techniques like the Triangle Choke is one of the things professors evaluate when considering a promotion. Beyond time in grade, your practical application of fundamentals matters.
Open the BJJ belt calculator to see where you stand against IBJJF minimums.
Open CalculatorThe basic motion is simple but effective execution requires understanding angles. Expect 6 to 12 months to reliably finish a triangle in sparring.
In extreme cases applied incorrectly or without release, yes. In normal training applied with respect and released on the tap, it is safe.
Drill the setup from closed guard extensively, then practice the angle adjustment and finish with a progressive squeeze on cooperative partners.
Yes. The triangle is one of the most reliable no-gi submissions and is heavily used in submission grappling competition.
Most failed triangles lack angle. Pivot your hips perpendicular before squeezing.