December 9, 2025
This guide breaks down how to design an effective 4‑day upper/lower split, including exercise selection, volume, progression, and recovery so you can build strength and muscle without guesswork.
A 4‑day upper/lower split balances frequency, recovery, and time efficiency for strength and muscle gain.
Base your routine around big compound lifts, then add accessories to fill weak points and imbalances.
Progressive overload, smart volume management, and planned deloads keep you getting stronger without burning out.
This article explains how to program an upper/lower split by walking through key design principles, then applying them to concrete 4‑day templates for beginners, intermediates, and people with specific goals like strength or hypertrophy. The list of routines is organized by experience level and primary goal, with each plan following evidence‑based training volumes, frequencies, and progression schemes.
Many lifters stall or get injured not because they lack effort, but because their weekly structure is chaotic. A well‑designed upper/lower split gives each muscle group enough weekly work and recovery, makes progression predictable, and is flexible enough to fit around a busy schedule.
An upper/lower split naturally hits each major muscle group twice weekly: two upper days (chest, back, shoulders, arms) and two lower days (quads, hamstrings, glutes, calves). Research supports 2x weekly frequency as highly effective for strength and hypertrophy because it allows you to distribute volume, practice technique more often, and recover between sessions.
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Build your week around big movements: squat, hinge (deadlift or RDL), horizontal press (bench or push‑up), vertical press (overhead press), horizontal pull (row), vertical pull (pull‑up/pulldown). These lifts train many muscles at once, drive strength gains, and give you the clearest progression metrics.
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Common layouts are Monday: Upper, Tuesday: Lower, Thursday: Upper, Friday: Lower, or similar spreads like Upper/Lower/Rest/Upper/Lower/Rest/Rest. Ensure at least one rest or light day between heavy lower days. Keep session length realistic (60–90 minutes) so you can consistently complete the program.
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Example: Upper A: Bench press, row. Lower A: Back squat, RDL. Upper B: Overhead press, pull‑up. Lower B: Deadlift or front squat, hip thrust. Each day starts with 1–2 big lifts that you’ll track closely. This builds a clear weekly pattern where you know exactly what you’re progressing.
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After main lifts, add 3–6 accessory movements per session: e.g., incline dumbbell press, lateral raises, triceps extensions on upper days; leg press, leg curls, calf raises, ab work on lower days. Choose easy‑to‑load, joint‑friendly variations that let you take sets close to failure safely.
1) Barbell or dumbbell bench press: 3 x 6–8 2) One‑arm dumbbell row or cable row: 3 x 8–10 3) Seated dumbbell shoulder press: 3 x 8–10 4) Lat pulldown or assisted pull‑up: 3 x 8–10 5) Dumbbell incline curl: 2–3 x 10–12 6) Cable or dumbbell triceps pressdown: 2–3 x 10–12
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1) Goblet squat or back squat: 3 x 6–8 2) Romanian deadlift (RDL): 3 x 8–10 3) Leg press: 2–3 x 10–12 4) Seated or standing calf raises: 3 x 10–15 5) Plank: 3 x 20–40 seconds
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1) Overhead press (barbell or dumbbells): 3 x 6–8 2) Pull‑ups or lat pulldown: 3 x 6–10 3) Incline dumbbell press: 3 x 8–10 4) Chest‑supported row or machine row: 3 x 8–10 5) Lateral raises: 2–3 x 10–15 6) Hammer curls: 2 x 10–12
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1) Barbell bench press: 4 x 4–6 2) Barbell or chest‑supported row: 4 x 5–7 3) Weighted dips or close‑grip bench: 3 x 6–8 4) Lat pulldown or weighted pull‑up: 3 x 6–8 5) Lateral raises: 3 x 10–15 6) Optional: face pulls: 2–3 x 12–15
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1) Back squat or safety bar squat: 4 x 4–6 2) Romanian deadlift: 3–4 x 6–8 3) Walking lunges or split squats: 3 x 8–10 per leg 4) Standing calf raises: 3 x 8–12 5) Ab wheel rollout or weighted plank: 3 sets
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1) Overhead press: 4 x 5–7 2) Pull‑ups (weighted if strong): 4 x 6–8 3) Incline dumbbell press: 3–4 x 8–10 4) Cable or machine row: 3–4 x 8–12 5) Biceps curl variation: 3 x 8–12 6) Triceps extension variation: 3 x 8–12
Keep compound lifts in the 3–6 rep range with more sets (4–6 per main lift). Use longer rest periods (2–4 minutes), prioritize barbell variations, and reduce accessory volume slightly to keep total work manageable. Track load progression weekly and consider using linear or undulating periodization (e.g., heavy/light weeks) for key lifts.
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Keep most work in the 6–15 rep range with 3–5 sets per lift and more variety in angles and grips. Increase accessory volume for delts, arms, and glutes to bring up lagging muscles. Rest 60–120 seconds for accessories, 90–180 seconds for compounds, and train close to failure (0–3 RIR) while managing joint stress.
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Aim for roughly 1:1 pushing to pulling sets over the week, and a similar balance between quads and posterior chain. For example, if you have 14 sets of pressing, aim for ~14 sets of rowing and pulling. This helps shoulder health and posture, and reduces the odds of knee or back issues from neglected posterior chain work.
Upper/lower splits work well across experience levels because you can scale volume easily: beginners grow on fewer sets, while intermediates can gradually add sets and intensity without changing the overall structure.
Balancing movement patterns (push/pull, squat/hinge) over the week is as important as counting sets; this pattern-based thinking keeps your joints healthy and your physique more symmetrical.
Small, consistent progression rules and planned deloads beat aggressive, sporadic changes—most long-term progress comes from years of steady overload on the same basic lifts within a stable weekly framework.
Frequently Asked Questions
Neither is universally better. A 4‑day upper/lower split provides more total weekly volume and slightly more specialization, which can benefit intermediate lifters and those focused on hypertrophy. Full‑body 3‑day programs are great for beginners, people with very limited time, or those who prefer shorter, less frequent gym visits.
Keep the same core structure and main lifts for at least 8–12 weeks while progressively overloading. You can rotate accessory exercises every 6–8 weeks if joints feel beat up or progress stalls, but frequent overhauls to the entire program make it harder to track what actually works.
Yes. Light to moderate cardio 2–3 times per week works well, ideally on rest days or after lifting. Keep intense intervals away from your heaviest lower days to avoid compromising performance. Walking, cycling, or low‑impact machines are easy to recover from for most people.
Do not try to cram missed sessions into one day. Instead, shift the schedule forward and complete the next planned workout. If you miss multiple sessions in a week, simply continue the sequence the following week. Long‑term consistency matters more than any single missed workout.
Transition when your main lifts have plateaued despite 2–3 months of consistent effort, sleep, and nutrition, and you are comfortable with proper technique. At that point, adding more structured volume, heavier work, and planned deloads via an intermediate template often restarts progress.
A 4‑day upper/lower split gives you a simple, scalable structure to train every major muscle group twice per week, balance strength and hypertrophy, and still recover. Start with a clear template, progress your main lifts steadily, adjust volume to your recovery, and keep the same basic framework for months—not days—to see meaningful strength and physique changes.
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For most lifters, 10–20 hard sets per muscle group per week is a solid evidence‑based range. Beginners often grow on the lower end (10–12 sets), while intermediates may benefit from 12–18 sets. Your upper/lower split simply spreads this volume across two sessions per muscle group, e.g., 5–8 sets for chest on each upper day.
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Progressive overload means making training slightly more challenging over time: adding weight, reps, sets, or improving technique. In practice, this might look like adding 2.5–5 kg to a main lift once you can perform all prescribed sets at the top end of your rep range with solid form, or adding 1–2 reps per set week‑to‑week.
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Place your heaviest, most technical lifts first in the session, use 1–3 reps in reserve on most sets to avoid constant failure, and every 5–8 weeks reduce volume or intensity for a deload week. This helps you avoid joint pain, excessive soreness, and performance drop‑offs.
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For strength, use more sets of lower reps (e.g., 3–5 sets of 3–6 reps) on main lifts. For hypertrophy, lean toward 3–4 sets of 6–12 reps for compounds and 8–15 for accessories. Most sets should end with 1–3 reps in reserve so you accumulate hard work without constant failure.
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Example rule: If you hit the top of the rep range on all sets with good form, increase load by the smallest possible increment next week. If you miss your target, stay with the same load until you hit it. This keeps overload objective and reduces random changes driven by mood.
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Schedule 7–9 hours of sleep, at least one full rest day weekly, and keep daily step count or light cardio for health. Every 5–8 weeks, reduce set counts by ~30–50% or drop loads by ~10–20% for one week while keeping movement patterns. This lets fatigue fall while maintaining skill.
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1) Leg press or front squat: 3 x 6–8 2) Hip thrust or glute bridge: 3 x 8–10 3) Leg curl (machine): 3 x 10–12 4) Calf raises: 3 x 10–15 5) Hanging knee raises or cable crunch: 3 x 10–15
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Train 4 days per week with at least 1 rest day between Lower A and Lower B. Add 2–5 kg to main lifts once you can complete all sets at the top of the rep range with good form for two consecutive sessions. Take 1 week at reduced volume after 6–8 weeks before repeating the cycle.
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1) Deadlift variation (conventional, sumo, trap bar): 3–4 x 3–5 2) Front squat or leg press: 3–4 x 6–8 3) Hip thrust: 3 x 8–10 4) Leg curl: 3 x 10–12 5) Seated calf raise: 3 x 10–15 6) Optional: anti‑rotation core (Pallof press): 2–3 x 10–12 per side
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Use double progression: aim for the top of rep ranges across all sets, then add 2.5–5 kg when achieved. Optionally, use 3 hard weeks followed by 1 lighter week with reduced sets. Track estimated reps in reserve each session to keep most work at 1–3 RIR, reserving true max‑effort sets for occasional testing.
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If sessions creep over 90 minutes or soreness lingers more than ~48 hours, cut 1–2 accessory movements per day or move some work to optional short “micro sessions” (e.g., 20‑minute arm or core add‑ons). You can also slightly lower weekly sets per muscle group (e.g., from 18 to 12–14) and still make progress, especially if nutrition and sleep improve.
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