Salsa Pal Medio (Para El Medio)
Beginner half-turn on the break, with roots in Cuban Casino
SalsaLevel: Beginner2 min read2 citations
Pal Medio is one of the first turning figures a salsa dancer learns: a half-turn that grows straight out of the basic step, danced on the break counts and leaving both partners facing the opposite way. Its name is a contraction of the Spanish Para El Medio ("to the center"), and the figure runs deep in Cuban Casino, where Para El Medio is a foundational move that brings a couple — or a whole Rueda de Casino circle — onto a common, synchronized step before the dance proper begins. Line and cross-body scenes kept both the name and its timing, so internationally the figure is still known by this same standard label.
Footwork and timing
Danced On1, the figure opens from the back-break of the basic. The leader steps back onto the left foot on count 1 while the follower steps back onto the right foot on the same count, so the couple preserves the mirror-image break direction that defines the basic.[1] Weight replaces forward across counts 2–3, and the back-step repeats on count 5 to open the slot for the rotation. On count 6 the leader initiates a left, inside quarter-turn while the follower initiates a right, outside quarter-turn of equal size; the rotation is completed on count 7, each partner having turned roughly 180° in opposite directions.[2]
Across the scenes
The figure sits comfortably within salsa's usual 150–185 bpm range and turns up across the New York, Los Angeles, Miami, Puerto Rican, Cali and Cuban social repertoires, almost always under this same name. Its Casino lineage keeps the move close to social practice, where a shared, synchronized step is what lets partners — and a full circle of couples — set out together.
Teaching cues
Clean execution depends on holding the slot, keeping the turn axis vertical and aligned, and finishing the half-turn squarely on count 7 without under- or over-rotating. Because it is built on the unaltered basic, Pal Medio is a natural stepping-off point from the basic step into Rueda de Casino calls and wider cross-body turn patterns.
How it's danced
Lead and follow cues
CountOn1 — breaks on 1 & 5; turn on 6‑7
Lead
1: step back left (break); 2‑3: replace weight forward right; 5: step back left; 6: begin left turn opening ~¼ turn; 7: complete left half turn (~180°) to face follower.
Follow
1: step back right (break); 2‑3: replace weight forward left; 5: step back right; 6: begin right turn opening ~¼ turn; 7: complete right half turn (~180°) to face leader.
Song timing150‑185 bpm (typical social salsa tempo)
Learn first
Prerequisites
- basic step (forward/back)
- basic quarter turn
Watch out
Common mistakes
- breaking on the wrong foot (leader back‑right, follower back‑left)
- under‑rotating the half turn, stopping short of ~180°
- over‑rotating beyond ~180°, losing the slot
- stepping outside the slot on counts 2‑3
- failing to align the turn axis, causing collision
Don't confuse with
Easily confused moves
- Pal Medio should not be confused with the 'Paloma' turn in ballroom dancing, which uses different footwork.
Around the world
Other names
New York (On1)
Pal Medio
References
- 1.I'm Breathless — Wikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
- 2.Washington Heights, Manhattan — Wikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
How to cite this article
Choose a style and copy the citation.
Bailar Editorial Team. (2026). Salsa Pal Medio (Para El Medio). Bailar Biblioteca. Retrieved June 29, 2026, from https://bailar.site/biblioteca/move/salsa-pal-medio
Bailar Editorial Team. “Salsa Pal Medio (Para El Medio).” Bailar Biblioteca, 2026, bailar.site/biblioteca/move/salsa-pal-medio. Accessed 29 June 2026.
Bailar Editorial Team. “Salsa Pal Medio (Para El Medio).” Bailar Biblioteca. Accessed June 29, 2026. https://bailar.site/biblioteca/move/salsa-pal-medio.
@misc{bailar-move-salsa-pal-medio, author = {{Bailar Editorial Team}}, title = {{Salsa Pal Medio (Para El Medio)}}, year = {2026}, howpublished = {Bailar Biblioteca}, url = {https://bailar.site/biblioteca/move/salsa-pal-medio}, note = {Accessed: 2026-06-29} }
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