Hypertrophy training is the systematic pursuit of muscle growth. Unlike strength training (focused on moving maximum weight) or endurance training (focused on sustained effort), hypertrophy training optimizes the variables that drive muscle protein synthesis: mechanical tension, metabolic stress, and muscle damage. This program applies current research to create a training protocol that maximizes your muscle-building potential.

The Mechanisms of Hypertrophy

Muscle hypertrophy occurs primarily through mechanical tension—the force muscles generate during contraction. When muscles contract against resistance, this tension triggers a cascade of molecular signals that stimulate protein synthesis. The greater and longer the tension, the stronger the growth signal.

Volume (sets × reps × weight) is the primary driver of hypertrophy. Research consistently shows a dose-response relationship between training volume and muscle growth—up to a point. For most people, 10-20 sets per muscle group per week is optimal, with diminishing returns beyond that.

Frequency matters because muscle protein synthesis (MPS) is elevated for 24-48 hours after training. Training each muscle 2-3 times per week captures multiple MPS elevations compared to once-weekly training, producing more total growth.

Benefits of Hypertrophy Training

  • Maximum Muscle Growth

    Hypertrophy training optimizes all variables for muscle building, producing superior results.

  • Improved Body Composition

    More muscle and less fat creates the physique most people aspire to.

  • Strength Gains

    Bigger muscles are stronger muscles. Hypertrophy training builds strength as a byproduct.

  • Metabolic Benefits

    More muscle mass increases resting metabolic rate and improves insulin sensitivity.

  • Joint Protection

    Muscle mass cushions and supports joints, potentially reducing injury risk.

  • Anti-Aging Effects

    Maintaining muscle mass combats sarcopenia and preserves quality of life with aging.

Program Overview

Frequency4-5 days per week (Push/Pull/Legs or Upper/Lower)
Duration55-70 minutes per session
StructureHigh volume training with periodized progression
EquipmentFull gym: barbells, dumbbells, cables, machines

Who it's for: Intermediate to advanced lifters focused on maximizing muscle growth

Don't have all this equipment? GymFriend can build you a custom program using whatever you have available.

Why These Exercises?

Each exercise in this program was selected for a specific reason. Here's why:

Barbell Full Squat

Maximum mechanical tension on quads and glutes. Nothing builds leg mass like heavy squats.

Barbell Bench Press

Primary chest mass builder. Allows heavy loading for maximum mechanical tension.

Pull-up

Superior lat builder. Creates the back width that defines an impressive physique.

Barbell Romanian Deadlift

Optimal hamstring hypertrophy stimulus with eccentric emphasis.

Dumbbell Standing Overhead Press

Best overall delt builder. Creates shoulder mass and width.

Dumbbell Incline Bench Press

Targets upper chest for balanced chest development and aesthetics.

The Complete 4-5 days (Push/Pull/Legs or Upper/Lower) Program

Follow this program consistently for best results. Start with weights that feel manageable and aim to increase gradually each week as you get stronger.

Day 1
Day 1: Push
Push-up
2 sets10 reps
Barbell Bench Press
4 sets6-8 reps155-205 lbs3 minutes rest
Dumbbell Standing Overhead Press
4 sets8-10 reps85-115 lbs2-3 minutes rest
Dumbbell Incline Bench Press
3 sets10-12 reps40-60 lb dumbbells each90 seconds rest
Dumbbell Lateral Raise
4 sets12-15 reps12-20 lb dumbbells each60 seconds rest
Cable Low Fly
3 sets12-15 reps20-35 lbs each60 seconds rest
Cable Pushdown
3 sets10-12 reps50-70 lbs60 seconds rest
Cable Rope High Pulley Overhead Tricep Extension
3 sets12-15 reps25-40 lbs60 seconds rest
Behind Head Chest Stretch
30 seconds each side
Behind Head Chest Stretch
30 seconds each arm
Day 2
Day 2: Pull
Pull-up
Add weight if needed
4 sets6-10 reps2-3 minutes rest
Barbell Bent Over Row
4 sets8-10 reps135-185 lbs2-3 minutes rest
Cable Bar Lateral Pulldown
3 sets10-12 reps100-140 lbs90 seconds rest
Cable Seated Row
3 sets10-12 reps100-140 lbs90 seconds rest
Dumbbell Rear Fly
4 sets12-15 reps12-20 lb dumbbells each60 seconds rest
Dumbbell Concentration Curl
3 sets10-12 reps20-30 lb dumbbells each60 seconds rest
Dumbbell Hammer Curl
3 sets10-12 reps20-30 lb dumbbells each60 seconds rest
Kneeling Lat Stretch
30 seconds each side
Neck Side Stretch
30 seconds each side
Day 3
Day 3: Legs
Ankle Circles
1 sets10 each leg reps
Barbell Full Squat
4 sets6-8 reps185-275 lbs3 minutes rest
Barbell Romanian Deadlift
4 sets8-10 reps155-225 lbs2-3 minutes rest
Sled 45° Leg Press
3 sets10-12 reps270-450 lbs2 minutes rest
Lever Seated Leg Curl
4 sets10-12 reps60-90 lbs90 seconds rest
Lever Leg Extension
3 sets12-15 reps70-110 lbs60 seconds rest
Cable Standing Calf Raise
4 sets10-12 reps120-200 lbs90 seconds rest
Lever Seated Calf Raise
3 sets12-15 reps50-90 lbs60 seconds rest
Standing Calves Calf Stretch
30 seconds each leg
Hamstring Stretch
30 seconds each leg
Kneeling Lat Stretch
30 seconds each side

Want this program adjusted for your fitness level, goals, or schedule? GymFriend can create a personalized version just for you.

Optimizing Your Hypertrophy Training

  • Train in the 6-12 rep range primarily, but include heavier (4-6) and lighter (12-15) work for complete development.
  • Progressively overload—add weight or reps each week. Without progression, there's no growth.
  • Eat in a caloric surplus (200-500 calories). Hypertrophy requires energy and building materials.
  • Consume 0.8-1g protein per pound of bodyweight to support muscle protein synthesis.
  • Get 7-9 hours of quality sleep. Growth hormone peaks during deep sleep.
  • Manage fatigue. Deload every 4-6 weeks to allow accumulated fatigue to dissipate.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How many sets per muscle group per week?

Research suggests 10-20 sets per muscle group weekly is optimal for most people. Start at the lower end and add volume only if you're recovering well and progress stalls.

Should I train to failure?

Training close to failure (1-3 reps in reserve) maximizes growth while allowing adequate recovery. Going to absolute failure on every set increases fatigue without proportional benefits.

How important is the mind-muscle connection?

Research shows focusing on the target muscle during isolation exercises improves muscle activation and may enhance growth. It's less relevant for heavy compound lifts where load is the primary driver.

What rep range is best for hypertrophy?

Muscle can be built across a wide range (5-30 reps), but the 6-12 range is most practical—heavy enough for tension, light enough for volume. Include variety across ranges.

How long should I rest between sets?

For compound exercises, 2-3 minutes. For isolation exercises, 60-90 seconds. Shorter rest increases metabolic stress; longer rest allows more weight/reps.