Find Your Ideal Weekly Workout Split
Select your options above and click ‘Suggest Split’ to see your recommended schedule.
How to Choose the Perfect Workout Split
Finding the right workout split isn’t about copying what a fitness influencer does; it is about matching your training volume to your schedule, experience level, and recovery capacity.
The calculator above uses two primary metrics to determine your optimal routine: how many days you can realistically commit to the gym, and your current training age. Here is the logic behind the results and why picking the right split is critical for burning fat and building muscle.
The Logic: Frequency vs. Volume
“Your muscles do not grow in the gym, they grow when you recover.“
- Beginners: If you are new to lifting, your central nervous system (CNS) adapts quickly. You do not need massive amounts of volume (sets and reps) to trigger growth. You need frequency. Hitting a muscle group 2 to 3 times a week with moderate volume allows you to master movement patterns and build a solid foundation.
Intermediate/Advanced: As you gain experience, it takes more localized volume to force muscle adaptation. You need more exercises per muscle group, which means you need to split your training days up to allow for adequate recovery between sessions.
Understanding the Splits
1. Full-Body Split (2β3 Days a Week)
Best for: Beginners, busy professionals, and those with unpredictable schedules.
How it works: You train your entire body (legs, chest, back, shoulders, arms) in a single session.
Why it works: It maximizes your training frequency. If you only have two days to train, splitting your body into separate parts means you might only hit your chest once every seven daysβwhich is not enough frequency to drive optimal progress.
2. Upper/Lower Split (4 Days a Week)
Best for: Intermediate lifters or dedicated beginners looking to level up.
How it works: You divide your training days into two upper-body days (chest, back, shoulders, arms) and two lower-body days (quads, hamstrings, glutes, calves).
Why it works: It provides a perfect balance. You hit every muscle group twice a week, but the total volume per session increases compared to a full-body routine, allowing for more targeted muscle growth.
3. Push/Pull/Legs (PPL) (5β6 Days a Week)
Best for: Advanced lifters with the time and recovery capacity for high-volume training.
Push: Chest, shoulders, and triceps.
Pull: Back, rear delts, and biceps.
Legs: Quads, hamstrings, glutes, and calves.
Why it works: This groups muscles that naturally work together. It allows for intense, high-volume isolation work while ensuring that when one group of muscles is working, the others are resting.
4. The Body-Part “Bro” Split (5 Days a Week)
Best for: Advanced lifters and bodybuilders focusing on maximum muscle hypertrophy.
How it works: Dedicating an entire day to a single muscle group (e.g., Chest day, Back day, Leg day).
Why it works: It allows for absolute maximum volume and fatigue on a specific muscle, followed by a full week of localized recovery.
The Reality of Recovery
More days in the gym does not automatically equal faster results. If you select a 6-day PPL split but only sleep 5 hours a night and eat a poor diet, you will overtrain, stall your progress, and risk injury. Your central nervous system will fatigue, and your performance will crash.
Always select a split you can stick to consistently for 12 weeks. Consistency on a 3-day split will always beat a 6-day split you quit after two weeks.
Stop Guessing. Start Progressing.
Knowing your ideal split is only 10% of the equation. To actually change your physique, you need the right exercises, the correct rep ranges, and a nutrition strategy tailored to your exact lifestyle.
If you are tired of building your own routines and spinning your wheels, let’s fix it. My online coaching is a complete overhaul of your training, nutrition, and mindset. If you put the work in and make no progress, I refund you 100%.
