Training Templates - Free Downloadable Workout Programs 2026

Training Templates

Free downloadable workout programs for all fitness levels and goals

About These Training Templates

This collection of free training templates is designed to eliminate confusion and provide proven, structured workout programs for lifters of all experience levels. Each template is based on evidence-based training principles and has been used successfully by thousands of athletes.

All programs include detailed exercise selection, set and rep schemes, progression protocols, and guidance on when to advance to the next program. Whether you're a complete beginner or an advanced lifter, there's a template here that matches your current ability and goals.

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Program Selection Guide

Experience LevelTraining AgeStrength StandardsRecommended Programs
Beginner0-12 monthsBodyweight bench press, 1.5x squat, 1.75x deadliftStarting Strength, StrongLifts 5x5, GZCLP, Greyskull LP
Intermediate1-3 years1.25x bench, 1.75-2x squat, 2-2.5x deadlift5/3/1, Texas Method, GZCL Method, PPL, Upper/Lower
Advanced3+ years1.5x+ bench, 2.25x+ squat, 2.75x+ deadliftPeriodized programs, Advanced 5/3/1 variations, Conjugate, PHAT

Important: Don't pick programs based on ego. If you've been training 6 months inconsistently, you're still a beginner. Jumping to advanced programs too soon leads to poor results, injury risk, and burnout. Stick with beginner programs until you've exhausted linear progression (adding weight every session), then move to intermediate.

Beginner Programs (0-12 Months)

Beginner programs focus on learning proper technique, building work capacity, and maximizing linear progression (adding weight every single workout). These programs are simple, compound-movement focused, and produce rapid strength gains in your first 6-12 months.

Starting Strength (3 Days/Week)

Beginner Strength Focus 3x/Week

Overview: The most popular beginner strength program. Alternates between two workouts (A and B) focusing on heavy compound movements with linear progression. Simple, effective, and proven for novice strength gains.

Best For: Complete beginners who want to get strong as quickly as possible. Ideal for first 3-6 months of training.

Program Structure:

  • Frequency: 3 days per week (Mon/Wed/Fri or similar)
  • Duration: 3-6 months (until linear progression stalls)
  • Rep Scheme: 3 sets of 5 reps (3x5) for main lifts, 1x5 for deadlifts
  • Progression: Add 5-10 lbs per session on squats/deadlifts, 2.5-5 lbs on bench/press

Workout A

ExerciseSets x RepsNotes
Squat3 x 5Low bar, add 5 lbs per session
Bench Press3 x 5Add 2.5 lbs per session
Deadlift1 x 5Add 10 lbs per session (heavy single set)

Workout B

ExerciseSets x RepsNotes
Squat3 x 5Every session, add 5 lbs
Overhead Press3 x 5Add 2.5 lbs per session
Power Clean (or Barbell Row)5 x 3 (or 3 x 5)Explosive power or back strength

Weekly Schedule Example:

  • Monday: Workout A
  • Wednesday: Workout B
  • Friday: Workout A
  • Monday: Workout B (alternate each week)

Expected Results (3-6 months):

  • Squat: +100-150 lbs (135 lbs → 235-285 lbs)
  • Deadlift: +120-180 lbs (185 lbs → 305-365 lbs)
  • Bench Press: +40-70 lbs (95 lbs → 135-165 lbs)
  • Overhead Press: +25-45 lbs (65 lbs → 90-110 lbs)

These are typical results for males 18-35 years old eating in calorie surplus with proper sleep and recovery.

📥 Download Starting Strength Template

StrongLifts 5x5 (3 Days/Week)

Beginner Strength Focus 3x/Week

Overview: Similar to Starting Strength but with 5 sets of 5 reps (5x5) instead of 3x5. More volume makes it slightly better for building muscle mass alongside strength. Alternates between A and B workouts.

Best For: Beginners who want balanced strength and muscle development. Good for those with 6-12 months available before plateauing.

Workout A

ExerciseSets x RepsRest
Squat5 x 53-5 min
Bench Press5 x 53-5 min
Barbell Row5 x 52-3 min

Workout B

ExerciseSets x RepsRest
Squat5 x 53-5 min
Overhead Press5 x 53-5 min
Deadlift1 x 5N/A (single set)

Progression Protocol:

  • Start with empty bar (45 lbs) or a weight you can do 5x5 easily
  • Add 5 lbs to squats and deadlifts every successful workout
  • Add 2.5 lbs to bench and press every successful workout
  • If you fail to complete 5x5 three workouts in a row, deload 10% and build back up

Deload Protocol: When you fail 5x5 three times (e.g., can only get 5/5/5/4/3), drop weight by 10% and work back up. This allows continued progression by building better technique and work capacity at submaximal weights before attempting PRs again.

📥 Download StrongLifts 5x5 Template

GZCLP - Linear Progression (4 Days/Week)

Beginner Balanced 4x/Week

Overview: More sophisticated beginner program that introduces tier-based training (T1 heavy compounds, T2 moderate compounds, T3 light accessories). Better balance between strength and hypertrophy than Starting Strength/StrongLifts.

Best For: Beginners who can commit to 4 days per week and want a more well-rounded program that includes accessory work for muscle building.

Tier Structure:

  • Tier 1 (T1): Main compound lift, 5 sets of 3 reps (5x3), heavy weight, focus on strength
  • Tier 2 (T2): Secondary compound, 3 sets of 10 reps (3x10), moderate weight, volume for hypertrophy
  • Tier 3 (T3): Accessories, 3 sets of 15+ reps (3x15+), light weight, pump and isolation

Day 1: Squat Focus

ExerciseTierSets x Reps
SquatT15 x 3+ (AMRAP last set)
Bench PressT23 x 10
Lat PulldownsT33 x 15+

Day 2: Overhead Press Focus

ExerciseTierSets x Reps
Overhead PressT15 x 3+ (AMRAP last set)
DeadliftT23 x 10
Dumbbell RowsT33 x 15+

Day 3: Bench Press Focus

ExerciseTierSets x Reps
Bench PressT15 x 3+ (AMRAP last set)
SquatT23 x 10
Dumbbell FlyesT33 x 15+

Day 4: Deadlift Focus

ExerciseTierSets x Reps
DeadliftT15 x 3+ (AMRAP last set)
Overhead PressT23 x 10
Bicep CurlsT33 x 15+

T1 Progression (5x3+):

  1. Start at a weight you can do 5x3 comfortably. Last set = AMRAP (as many reps as possible)
  2. If you get 3+ reps on AMRAP set, add 5 lbs (lower body) or 2.5 lbs (upper body) next session
  3. If you fail to get 3 reps on AMRAP set twice, switch to 6x2
  4. At 6x2, if you fail to get 2 reps on AMRAP twice, switch to 10x1
  5. At 10x1, if you fail to get 1 rep, reset to 85% of starting weight and begin 5x3 again

T2 & T3 Progression: Add weight when you can complete all prescribed reps with good form.

📥 Download GZCLP Template

Intermediate Programs (1-3 Years)

Intermediate programs introduce periodization, varied rep ranges, and more sophisticated progression schemes. Linear progression (adding weight every session) no longer works, so these programs use weekly or monthly progression instead.

5/3/1 for Beginners (3 Days/Week)

Intermediate Balanced 3x/Week

Overview: Jim Wendler's 5/3/1 program adapted for 3 days per week. Each workout contains 2 main lifts plus assistance work. Uses submaximal training (based on 90% of 1RM) with monthly progression. Builds strength while leaving room for recovery.

Best For: Lifters who've exhausted linear progression and need slower, sustainable strength gains. Great for long-term progression (can run for years).

Key Principles:

  • Training Max (TM): 90% of your true 1RM. All percentages based on TM, not true max
  • 4-Week Cycles: Week 1 (3x5), Week 2 (3x3), Week 3 (3x5/3/1), Week 4 (Deload 3x5 at 40-60%)
  • AMRAP Sets: Last set of each workout = as many reps as possible (AMRAP) for autoregulation
  • Monthly Progression: After 4-week cycle, add 5 lbs to upper body TM, 10 lbs to lower body TM

Week 1 Example (3x5 Week)

DayMain Lift 1Main Lift 2Assistance
MondaySquat: 65%x5, 75%x5, 85%x5+Bench: 65%x5, 75%x5, 85%x5+50-100 reps Push/Pull/Single Leg or Core
WednesdayDeadlift: 65%x5, 75%x5, 85%x5+OHP: 65%x5, 75%x5, 85%x5+50-100 reps Push/Pull/Single Leg or Core
FridayBench: 65%x5, 75%x5, 85%x5+Squat: 65%x5, 75%x5, 85%x5+50-100 reps Push/Pull/Single Leg or Core

4-Week Cycle Breakdown:

  • Week 1 (3x5): 65% x 5, 75% x 5, 85% x 5+ (AMRAP)
  • Week 2 (3x3): 70% x 3, 80% x 3, 90% x 3+ (AMRAP)
  • Week 3 (5/3/1): 75% x 5, 85% x 3, 95% x 1+ (AMRAP)
  • Week 4 (Deload): 40% x 5, 50% x 5, 60% x 5 (no AMRAP, recovery week)

Assistance Work (50-100 reps each category):

  • Push: Dips, push-ups, dumbbell press, overhead press variations
  • Pull: Pull-ups, chin-ups, rows, face pulls, curls
  • Single Leg/Core: Lunges, split squats, leg curls, ab wheel, planks

Expected Progress: Add 60 lbs to lower body lifts and 30 lbs to upper body lifts per year (5 lbs/month upper, 10 lbs/month lower). Slower than beginner programs but sustainable for years without stalling.

📥 Download 5/3/1 for Beginners Template

PPL - Push/Pull/Legs (6 Days/Week)

Intermediate Hypertrophy 6x/Week

Overview: The most popular bodybuilding split. Divides body into Push (chest, shoulders, triceps), Pull (back, biceps), and Legs (quads, hamstrings, glutes, calves). Each muscle group trained 2x per week with high volume. Excellent for muscle building.

Best For: Intermediate lifters focused on hypertrophy who can train 6 days per week. Ideal for aesthetics and balanced physique development.

Push Day (Chest, Shoulders, Triceps)

ExerciseSets x RepsNotes
Bench Press (Barbell or Dumbbell)4 x 5-8Heavy compound, strength focus
Overhead Press (Barbell or Dumbbell)3 x 8-12Shoulder development
Incline Dumbbell Press3 x 8-12Upper chest emphasis
Lateral Raises3 x 12-20Side delts, slow controlled reps
Tricep Pushdowns (or Overhead Extension)3 x 10-15Tricep isolation
Cable Flyes or Dips3 x 12-15Chest pump finisher

Pull Day (Back, Biceps, Rear Delts)

ExerciseSets x RepsNotes
Deadlift (or Rack Pull)3 x 5-8Heavy compound, total back development
Pull-Ups or Lat Pulldowns3 x 8-12Lat width, add weight if needed
Barbell or Dumbbell Rows3 x 8-12Back thickness, mid-back
Face Pulls4 x 15-20Rear delts and upper back health
Barbell or Dumbbell Curls3 x 10-15Bicep mass
Hammer Curls3 x 12-15Brachialis and forearm

Leg Day (Quads, Hamstrings, Glutes, Calves)

ExerciseSets x RepsNotes
Squat (Back or Front)4 x 5-8Heavy compound, quad/glute development
Romanian Deadlift3 x 8-12Hamstring and glute focus
Leg Press3 x 10-15Quad volume, safer than squats for fatigue
Leg Curls (Lying or Seated)3 x 12-15Hamstring isolation
Walking Lunges or Bulgarian Split Squats3 x 10-12 per legUnilateral leg work, balance
Calf Raises (Standing or Seated)4 x 12-20Calf development, high volume

Weekly Schedule:

  • Monday: Push
  • Tuesday: Pull
  • Wednesday: Legs
  • Thursday: Push
  • Friday: Pull
  • Saturday: Legs
  • Sunday: Rest

Progression: Add weight when you can complete all sets at top of rep range (e.g., 4x8 → add 5 lbs, work back up to 4x8).

📥 Download PPL Template

Upper/Lower 4-Day Split

Intermediate Balanced 4x/Week

Overview: Efficient split that trains each muscle group 2x per week in only 4 training days. Excellent balance between frequency, volume, and recovery. Each muscle hit with ~10-16 sets per week.

Best For: Intermediates who want results but can't commit to 6 days per week. Great for strength and size gains with manageable time commitment.

Upper Body A (Strength Focus)

ExerciseSets x Reps
Bench Press4 x 4-6
Barbell Row4 x 4-6
Overhead Press3 x 6-8
Pull-Ups (Weighted)3 x 6-8
Dumbbell Curls3 x 8-12
Tricep Dips or Skullcrushers3 x 8-12

Lower Body A (Squat Focus)

ExerciseSets x Reps
Back Squat4 x 4-6
Romanian Deadlift3 x 6-10
Leg Press3 x 10-15
Leg Curls3 x 10-15
Standing Calf Raises4 x 12-15
Abs (Hanging Leg Raises or Ab Wheel)3 x 10-20

Upper Body B (Hypertrophy Focus)

ExerciseSets x Reps
Incline Dumbbell Press4 x 8-12
Seated Cable Row4 x 8-12
Dumbbell Overhead Press3 x 10-15
Lat Pulldowns3 x 10-15
Lateral Raises3 x 12-20
Face Pulls3 x 15-20
Cable Curls + Tricep Pushdowns (Superset)3 x 12-15 each

Lower Body B (Deadlift Focus)

ExerciseSets x Reps
Deadlift (Conventional or Sumo)3 x 3-5
Front Squat or Hack Squat3 x 8-12
Walking Lunges3 x 10-12 per leg
Leg Extensions3 x 12-20
Seated Calf Raises4 x 15-20
Abs (Cable Crunches or Planks)3 x 15-60sec

Weekly Schedule: Mon (Upper A), Tue (Lower A), Thu (Upper B), Fri (Lower B)

📥 Download Upper/Lower Template

Advanced Programs (3+ Years)

Advanced programs feature sophisticated periodization, high volume, specialized intensity techniques, and require excellent recovery capacity. These are for experienced lifters who've mastered technique and built substantial training tolerance.

PHAT - Power Hypertrophy Adaptive Training

Advanced Balanced 5x/Week

Overview: Layne Norton's PHAT combines powerlifting-style heavy training (power days) with bodybuilding-style volume training (hypertrophy days) in the same week. Two power days focusing on strength (3-5 reps), three hypertrophy days focusing on muscle growth (8-20 reps).

Best For: Advanced lifters who want maximum strength AND size. Requires excellent recovery capacity and 5+ hours per week training time.

Weekly Structure:

  • Day 1: Upper Body Power (heavy compounds, 3-5 reps)
  • Day 2: Lower Body Power (heavy compounds, 3-5 reps)
  • Day 3: Rest
  • Day 4: Back & Shoulders Hypertrophy (volume, 8-20 reps)
  • Day 5: Lower Body Hypertrophy (volume, 8-20 reps)
  • Day 6: Chest & Arms Hypertrophy (volume, 8-20 reps)
  • Day 7: Rest

Day 1: Upper Power

ExerciseSets x Reps
Barbell Bench Press3-4 x 3-5
Weighted Pull-Ups3-4 x 3-5
Overhead Press3 x 5-6
Barbell Rows3 x 5-6
Close Grip Bench or Weighted Dips3 x 6-8
Barbell Curls3 x 6-8

Day 2: Lower Power

ExerciseSets x Reps
Back Squat3-4 x 3-5
Deadlift3 x 3-5
Leg Press3 x 10-15
Leg Curls3 x 6-10
Standing Calf Raises4 x 6-10

Hypertrophy Days: Higher volume (15-25 sets per muscle group), moderate weight, variety of angles and exercises, shorter rest periods (60-90 sec), focus on muscle pump and time under tension.

Why PHAT Works: Heavy power days stimulate maximum motor unit recruitment and neurological adaptations (strength). Hypertrophy days provide volume and metabolic stress for muscle growth. Combined, you get both strength and size adaptations within same week.

📥 Download PHAT Template

nSuns LP - High Volume Linear Progression

Advanced Strength 4-6x/Week

Overview: Extremely high-volume program based on 5/3/1 principles but with linear progression. Features 9 sets of main lift plus 8 sets of secondary lift per session, totaling 17 working sets before accessories. Known for rapid strength gains but very demanding.

Best For: Advanced lifters with excellent recovery who want to push strength limits. Not for those with time constraints or poor recovery capacity.

Key Features:

  • 9 sets of main compound lift per session (varied rep ranges 2-8 reps)
  • 8 sets of secondary compound lift (6-10 reps)
  • Weekly progression (+5 lbs if hit rep targets on AMRAP set)
  • 4, 5, or 6-day variations available
  • Accessories chosen by lifter (minimum requirements)

Day 1: Bench Press / Overhead Press

SetBench Press (% of TM)Overhead Press (% of TM)
175% x 850% x 6
285% x 660% x 5
395% x 370% x 3
490% x 570% x 5
585% x 770% x 7
680% x 470% x 4
775% x 670% x 6
870% x 870% x 8
965% x 8+-

Progression: If you hit 2-3 reps on AMRAP set (last set), add 5 lbs to training max next week. If you get 4+ reps, add 10 lbs (lower body) or 5 lbs (upper body).

Accessories (minimum): 50-100 reps each of push, pull, and legs/core per session.

Warning: This program has extremely high volume (17+ sets per main session). Only for advanced lifters with 3+ years consistent training, excellent technique, and strong recovery protocols (8+ hours sleep, surplus calories, stress management). Beginners and intermediates will overtrain and burn out.

📥 Download nSuns Template

Specialized Strength Programs

These programs prioritize maximum strength development in the powerlifting movements (squat, bench, deadlift) or Olympic lifts. Lower rep ranges (1-5 reps), higher intensity, and specific peaking protocols.

Candito 6-Week Strength Program

Intermediate Strength Peaking 4x/Week

Overview: Jonnie Candito's 6-week peaking program designed to maximize 1RM in squat, bench, and deadlift. Progresses from high volume to low volume/high intensity, culminating in testing week. Excellent for powerlifting meet prep or testing maxes.

6-Week Phase Breakdown:

  • Week 1-2: Muscular Conditioning (high volume 6-10 reps, build work capacity)
  • Week 3: Heavy Weight Acclimation (low volume 3-5 reps, heavy weights 85-90%)
  • Week 4-5: Intensification (very heavy 1-3 reps, 90-97.5%, low volume)
  • Week 6: Deload and Max Testing (reduce volume, test new 1RMs)

Best For: Intermediate/advanced lifters preparing for powerlifting meet or wanting to set new PRs. Not for continuous year-round use—run 6 weeks, then switch to volume program.

📥 Download Candito 6-Week Template

Sheiko Powerlifting Programs

Advanced Powerlifting 3-4x/Week

Overview: Boris Sheiko's renowned Russian powerlifting programs. Extremely high frequency of main lifts (squat/bench/deadlift multiple times per week) with moderate intensity (70-85% range). Focuses on skill practice and technical proficiency under submaximal loads.

Key Principles:

  • Multiple main lift variations per week (competition squat, pause squat, squat with chains, etc.)
  • Moderate intensity (rarely exceed 85%) but very high volume
  • Emphasis on bar speed and technique perfection
  • Minimal accessories—almost all compound movements
  • 16-week competition prep cycles (Prep cycle → Competition cycle → Peak)

Best For: Advanced powerlifters (Intermediate+ classification) preparing for competitions. Requires significant time commitment (2-3 hours per session) and excellent recovery.

Popular Sheiko Programs: Sheiko #29 (3-day intermediate), Sheiko #37 (4-day intermediate), Sheiko #30 (3-day competition prep), Sheiko #32 (4-day advanced), Sheiko Gold app with AI-customized programming.

📥 Download Sheiko Resources

Specialized Hypertrophy Programs

These programs maximize muscle growth through high volume, varied rep ranges, intensity techniques, and targeted muscle-building protocols. Strength gains are secondary to aesthetic development.

Reddit PPL (Metallicadpa's 6-Day)

Intermediate Hypertrophy 6x/Week

Overview: The most popular PPL variation on Reddit. Linear progression on main lifts combined with bodybuilding-style accessories. Each muscle group hit twice per week with optimal volume for muscle growth.

Why It's Effective:

  • Simple progression: add weight when you hit top of rep range
  • Balanced volume: ~15-20 sets per muscle group per week
  • Variety of rep ranges: 4-6 reps (strength), 8-12 reps (hypertrophy), 12-20 reps (pump work)
  • Covers all muscle groups with appropriate exercise selection

Sample Progression: Bench press 3x5: Start 135 lbs → hit 3x5 → increase to 140 lbs → work back up to 3x5 → increase to 145 lbs → repeat.

📥 Download Reddit PPL Template

Hypertrophy-Specific Training (HST)

Intermediate Science-Based Hypertrophy 3x/Week

Overview: Full-body program based on hypertrophy research. Uses strategic deconditioning, progressive overload across rep ranges, and high frequency (each muscle 3x/week). 8-week cycles progressing from 15 reps to 5 reps with same exercises.

8-Week Cycle Structure:

  • Week 1-2: 2 sets of 15 reps (65% 1RM)
  • Week 3-4: 2 sets of 10 reps (75% 1RM)
  • Week 5-6: 3 sets of 5 reps (85% 1RM)
  • Week 7-8: Negatives or max stimulation techniques
  • Week 9-10: Strategic Deconditioning (1-2 weeks off to resensitize muscles)

Best For: Lifters who prefer full-body training and want evidence-based approach to muscle building. Good for those with limited time (45-60 min sessions).

📥 Download HST Template

How to Choose the Right Program

With so many programs available, choosing the right one is critical for success. Here's a systematic approach to finding your perfect match.

Step 1: Assess Your Training Experience

Beginner (0-12 months):

  • Still adding weight to the bar every single workout (linear progression)
  • Squat <1.5x bodyweight, Bench <1x bodyweight, Deadlift <2x bodyweight
  • Learning proper form on main lifts
  • Best programs: Starting Strength, StrongLifts 5x5, GZCLP, Greyskull LP

Intermediate (1-3 years):

  • Can no longer add weight every workout (need weekly/monthly progression)
  • Squat 1.5-2x BW, Bench 1-1.5x BW, Deadlift 2-2.5x BW
  • Solid technique on main lifts, ready for more volume and variety
  • Best programs: 5/3/1 variations, PPL, Upper/Lower, Texas Method, GZCL Method

Advanced (3+ years):

  • Progress measured in months, not weeks. Need sophisticated periodization
  • Squat >2x BW, Bench >1.5x BW, Deadlift >2.5x BW
  • High work capacity, excellent recovery, mastered technique
  • Best programs: PHAT, nSuns, Sheiko, Conjugate Method, advanced 5/3/1 templates

Step 2: Define Your Primary Goal

GoalRecommended ProgramsKey Features
Maximum Strength (Powerlifting)Candito 6-Week, Sheiko, nSuns, Texas Method, 5/3/1 Strength variationsHeavy weights (80-95% 1RM), low reps (1-5), compound focus, longer rest periods
Muscle Size (Bodybuilding)PPL, Upper/Lower, Bro Split, HST, Reddit PPL, Volume-focused 5/3/1Moderate weights (65-85%), higher reps (6-20), more volume (15-25 sets/muscle/week)
Balanced (Strength + Size)GZCLP, 5/3/1 for Beginners, PHAT, Upper/Lower, GZCL MethodMix of heavy low-rep and moderate high-rep work, compound + accessories
General Fitness / Athletic Performance5/3/1, Starting Strength, Full-Body 3x/week programsFunctional strength, conditioning work, sustainable long-term

Step 3: Consider Your Schedule & Recovery

Available DaysBest Program TypesExamples
3 Days/WeekFull-body or Condensed ProgramsStarting Strength, StrongLifts, 5/3/1 for Beginners, HST
4 Days/WeekUpper/Lower or 4-Day ProgramsGZCLP, Upper/Lower Split, nSuns 4-day, 5/3/1 4-day
5 Days/WeekUpper/Lower + Extra or 5-Day SplitsPHAT, nSuns 5-day, 5/3/1 BBB 5-day
6 Days/WeekPPL or High-Frequency ProgramsReddit PPL, Metallicadpa's PPL, nSuns 6-day, Conjugate

Red Flags: When a Program Isn't Right

Don't choose a program if:

  • You can't commit to the frequency: Missing workouts makes periodized programs ineffective
  • It requires equipment you don't have: Substitute exercises usually work, but too many substitutions ruin program design
  • Recovery demands exceed your capacity: High-volume programs require 8+ hours sleep, adequate nutrition, low life stress
  • It's significantly above your experience level: Running nSuns as a beginner = guaranteed overtraining and injury
  • You're chasing trends rather than following principles: New "secret Bulgarian method" probably isn't better than proven programs
  • The program seems random or lacks progression plan: "Muscle confusion" is marketing, not science. You need structured progressive overload.

Green Flags: Signs of a Good Program

Look for these indicators:

  • Clear progression protocol: Defined rules for when/how to add weight or volume
  • Appropriate volume for your level: Beginners: 30-60 sets/week total. Intermediates: 40-80. Advanced: 60-100+
  • Balanced muscle group training: Each muscle group hit 2-3x per week with 10-20 sets weekly
  • Includes both compounds and accessories: Main lifts for strength, accessories for weak points and hypertrophy
  • Deload/recovery periods: Every 4-8 weeks, volume or intensity reduces to facilitate adaptation
  • Proven track record: Used successfully by thousands, not just one person's secret program
  • Matches your schedule and equipment: Realistic to complete given your time and gym access

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Frequently Asked Questions

How long should I run each program before switching? +

It depends on the program design and your progress:

Beginner Linear Progression Programs (Starting Strength, StrongLifts): Run until you can no longer add weight consistently, typically 3-9 months. Don't switch prematurely just because gains slow down—that's normal after initial rapid progress. Switch when you fail the same weight 3 times despite deloading, or when you've been stuck for 3-4 weeks.

Intermediate Programs (5/3/1, PPL, Upper/Lower): Minimum 3-6 months, preferably 6-12 months. These programs are designed for long-term progression. Many lifters run 5/3/1 for years by rotating through different assistance templates while keeping core structure. Switch if progress completely stalls for 3+ months despite proper nutrition/sleep, or if you want to specialize (e.g., switch to powerlifting-specific program for meet).

Peaking Programs (Candito 6-Week, Smolov): Run exactly as designed (usually 4-8 weeks), then switch to maintenance or volume program. These are not sustainable long-term due to high intensity and low volume. Use for competition prep or testing maxes, not year-round.

Advanced/Periodized Programs (PHAT, nSuns, Sheiko): Complete full meso/macrocycles (typically 8-16 weeks) before evaluating. Switching mid-cycle wastes the periodization strategy. If program works, you can run multiple cycles back-to-back with slight modifications.

General Rule: Program hopping (switching every 4-6 weeks) prevents you from adapting and learning what works for your body. Commit to programs for 3-6 months minimum unless you have a specific reason to change (injury, schedule change, goal shift). Progress comes from consistency, not novelty.

Can I modify or customize these programs? +

Yes, but be very cautious—most modifications make programs worse, not better.

Safe modifications (generally fine):

  • Exercise substitutions for injury/equipment: Can't back squat due to injury? Front squat, leg press, or Bulgarian split squats are reasonable substitutes. Don't have barbell? Dumbbells work for most exercises (though less ideal for main compounds).
  • Adding accessories for weak points: Extra 3-4 sets of lateral raises if shoulders lagging, extra arm work if bis/tris need attention. Keep main program structure intact.
  • Adjusting T3/accessory exercise selection: Most programs give freedom on accessories. Choose based on your weak points, preferences, and equipment available.
  • Minor schedule adjustments: Training Mon/Wed/Fri instead of Mon/Tue/Thu is fine. Training 6 days instead of 5 by splitting rest days differently is okay.

Dangerous modifications (usually make programs worse):

  • Changing main lift rep schemes: Turning 5/3/1 into 8/5/3 because "I respond better to higher reps" undermines the program's intensity progression.
  • Adding significantly more volume: "I'll do 5 sets instead of 3 on everything" usually leads to overtraining, not better results. Programs are designed with recovery in mind.
  • Removing compound lifts: "I'll replace squats with leg extensions" destroys program effectiveness. Compounds are irreplaceable.
  • Ignoring deloads: "Deloads are for weak people" leads to burnout and injury. Deloads are where adaptation occurs.
  • Frankenstein programs: Taking week 1-2 from one program, week 3-4 from another creates incoherent mess without proper periodization.

Best practice: Run program exactly as written for first 6-12 weeks to understand how it works and how your body responds. Then make minor tweaks based on individual needs (weak points, recovery capacity, schedule). Major overhauls usually indicate you chose wrong program—find better match instead of ruining good program.

What if I miss a workout? How do I get back on track? +

Missing occasional workouts is normal—here's how to handle it without derailing progress:

Missing 1 Workout:

  • Best approach: Skip it and continue with next scheduled workout. Don't try to "make up" missed day by training 2 days in a row or doubling volume.
  • Alternative: If you have time later in week, shift schedule forward one day. Miss Monday? Do Monday workout on Tuesday, Tuesday workout on Wednesday, etc.
  • Impact: Minimal. One missed workout out of 12-16 per month is <8% of total volume. Won't significantly impact progress.

Missing 2-3 Workouts (Sick, Travel, Emergency):

  • Within same week: Try to hit at least main compound lifts from missed days if you can squeeze them in. Skip accessories if needed.
  • Cross into next week: Resume normal schedule with next workout. You may need to reduce weights slightly (5-10%) for first workout back to account for detraining.
  • For periodized programs (5/3/1, etc.): If you miss >50% of a week, repeat that week before moving to next phase.

Missing 1-2 Weeks (Illness, Major Life Event):

  • Return with reduced volume (2 sets instead of 3-4) and intensity (reduce weights 10-15%) for first week back.
  • Treat it as forced deload—your body may come back stronger after recovery period.
  • After comeback week, resume program at point where you left off (don't restart from beginning unless you took 4+ weeks completely off).

Missing 3+ Weeks (Extended Break):

  • Significant detraining occurs after 3 weeks. You'll lose some strength and work capacity.
  • Restart program from beginning OR reduce training maxes by 20-25% and work back up.
  • Don't be discouraged—muscle memory means you'll regain lost strength/size much faster than it took initially (2-3 months to return to previous level vs 6-12 months originally).

Prevention Tips: Build flexibility into your schedule (don't plan 6 days/week if you can realistically only commit to 4-5). Have contingency plan for busy periods (abbreviated 2-3 day full-body program for travel). Life happens—fitness is long-term journey, not sprint. Consistency matters more than perfection.

Should I follow the program exactly or listen to my body? +

Both—but understanding when to follow the program vs when to auto-regulate is critical skill.

Follow the Program When:

  • You're just "not feeling it": Most great workouts happen when you don't feel like training initially. Motivation follows action. Warm up properly, do at least first main exercise—you'll usually feel better once moving.
  • Normal fatigue from progressive overload: Feeling moderately tired or sore is expected with proper training. Programs are designed to accumulate fatigue then dissipate it during deloads. Trust the process.
  • Hitting prescribed AMRAP sets: Program says "95% x 1+", even if you could do 5 reps, stick to what's prescribed. More isn't always better—programs account for fatigue management.
  • You're a beginner (0-12 months): You don't yet have enough training experience to accurately assess when to push vs back off. Follow program strictly to learn your body's signals.

Listen to Your Body When:

  • Acute injury or sharp pain: "Bad" pain (sharp, stabbing, joint pain) vs "good" pain (muscle burn, dull soreness). Stop if experiencing bad pain. Never train through sharp joint pain.
  • Illness (fever, flu, infection): Skip workout if fever >100°F, bad cold, stomach virus. Training while sick lengthens recovery and risks myocarditis (heart inflammation). Resume when fever-free for 24 hours.
  • Severe accumulated fatigue: If every workout for 2+ weeks feels terrible despite adequate sleep/nutrition, you may need extra rest day or deload. Chronic fatigue indicates overtraining or life stress.
  • CNS fatigue on heavy days: If warm-up weights feel like 90% effort, consider reducing working weights 10-15% that day. Forcing heavy singles when fried increases injury risk.
  • Major life stressors (death, divorce, job loss): Your body doesn't differentiate stress sources. Reduce volume/intensity during acute life stress periods.

The Balance: Programs work because they provide structure and progressive overload. But they're written for "average" person without knowing your sleep, nutrition, stress, or genetics. Advanced lifters develop intuition for when 10% reduction preserves long-term progress vs when pushing through moderate fatigue builds mental toughness. When in doubt: complete warm-up sets, assess honestly, then either continue program or reduce 10-20% for that session. Never completely skip workout unless genuinely sick/injured—even reduced training maintains progress better than nothing.