Bachata
360 Turn
One full, committed rotation. Not a quick spin — a complete, travelled 360 with control all the way around. The turn that finally looks finished.
Also known as: full turn, complete rotation
This move builds: Frame & Lead-Follow Clarity …on the always-on five — Connection, Frame, Comfort, Posture, Consent.
- Entry
- open L-to-R
- Exit
- open L-to-R
- Tempo
- medium
- Musical use
- accent
- Connector
- Yes — connects open L-to-R → open L-to-R vocabulary
- Level
- Intermediate
- Cluster
- open-hands
- Style
- Modern
What This Move Is
A single full rotation of the follow — but danced as a complete, controlled 360 with travel and styling, not a rushed spin. Where the beginner inside turn just gets her around, the 360 is about the rotation: the spotting, the balance, the clean arrival. It's the turn that tells you the follow's technique has matured.
Key Points
- Lead: Give a clear, sustained lead through the whole rotation — your hand stays a calm axis above her head start to finish. Don't over-power it; a 360 is led with steadiness, not force.
- Follow: Spot one point, commit to the full circle, and stay over your axis the whole way. The control through the middle of the turn is what makes it read as a 360 rather than a wobble.
- Timing: Prep on the tap, full rotation across the 8, clean arrival on the last tap.
- Common mistake: Rushing the rotation and under- or over-turning. A 360 is a full circle, controlled — finish exactly where you can keep dancing.
Style Notes
The controlled full-turn step up from the Double Inside Turn (B082). Distinct from the Advanced Double Turn (B017), which is faster and sharper — this is about clean, complete control. Master this and multi-turns stop being scary.
Chains into
After this, you can flow into…