The Split Debate
At HonestLifter, we have run every major split, tracked the research, and coached people through all of them. If you spend any time in fitness communities, you have seen this argument. Someone posts asking which training split is best, and the thread immediately devolves into tribal warfare. Full body devotees cite frequency research. Bro split defenders point to decades of bodybuilding history. PPL advocates claim they have found the perfect middle ground.
Here is the thing: they are all partially right, and they are all missing the bigger picture. The "best" split depends on your training experience, schedule, goals, and recovery capacity. But there are some evidence-based principles that can guide the decision, and that is what this article is about.
We are going to look at the actual research on training frequency and volume, break down each major split, provide sample programs for each, and give you a framework for deciding which one makes sense for your situation. That is the HonestLifter approach -- no dogma, no ego, just information.
Training Frequency: What the Research Shows
Training frequency refers to how many times per week you train a specific muscle group. This is the central variable that differentiates training splits, and it is the area where we have the most useful research.
The Frequency Meta-Analyses
A widely cited meta-analysis by Schoenfeld, Ogborn, and Krieger (2016) examined the effects of training frequency on muscle hypertrophy. The analysis compared training a muscle group once per week versus two or more times per week, with total weekly volume equated between groups. The conclusion was that training a muscle group at least twice per week produced superior hypertrophic outcomes compared to once per week.
This is the study that launched a thousand "bro splits are dead" articles. But the nuance matters. The advantage of higher frequency was statistically significant but relatively modest. And the study compared once per week to twice or more -- it did not find that three times per week was necessarily better than twice per week.
A subsequent meta-analysis by Grgic et al. (2018) examined whether training frequencies higher than twice per week provided additional benefits. The findings were less clear. While there was a trend favoring higher frequencies, the differences were not statistically significant in most comparisons once total volume was equated.
What This Means Practically
The research suggests a minimum effective frequency of about twice per week per muscle group for hypertrophy. Training a muscle once per week can work -- decades of bodybuilders have proven that -- but you are leaving some potential gains on the table compared to hitting each muscle twice per week with the same total volume.
Going above twice per week (three or four times) may provide a small additional benefit, but the evidence is weaker, and the practical challenges (scheduling, recovery, fatigue management) increase substantially.
Key Takeaway
Training each muscle group at least twice per week appears to be superior to once per week for hypertrophy, when total weekly volume is the same. Beyond twice per week, the additional benefit is marginal for most people.
Volume: How Much Is Enough?
Volume -- typically measured as the number of hard (challenging) sets per muscle group per week -- is arguably the most important driver of hypertrophy when you are past the beginner stage. And your chosen split determines how you distribute that volume across the week.
The Volume Landmarks
Dr. Mike Israetel of Renaissance Periodization has proposed a useful framework of volume landmarks for different muscle groups. While the specific numbers vary by individual, the general framework looks something like this:
- Minimum Effective Volume (MEV): The minimum number of sets per week needed to make measurable progress. For most muscle groups, this is around 6-8 sets per week.
- Maximum Adaptive Volume (MAV): The volume range where you are making the most progress relative to the recovery cost. For most muscle groups, this is roughly 12-20 sets per week.
- Maximum Recoverable Volume (MRV): The most volume you can do and still recover from week to week. Beyond this, you start accumulating fatigue faster than you can recover, and performance declines. This varies enormously by individual but is typically 20-25+ sets per week for larger muscle groups.
For most intermediate lifters looking to maximize hypertrophy, the research suggests that somewhere between 10 and 20 hard sets per muscle group per week is the productive range. Going above 20 sets may provide diminishing returns and increases the risk of overtraining symptoms.
How Volume Relates to Splits
Here is why this matters for your split choice: if you need to do 15 sets per week for chest to optimize growth, how you distribute those sets matters.
- Bro split (1x/week): All 15 sets in one session. That is a lot of volume in a single workout. The last several sets will be performed in a fatigued state, which reduces their quality.
- PPL (2x/week): 7-8 sets per session across two workouts. Each set is performed in a fresher state, meaning better form, higher intensity, and more productive stimulus.
- Full body (3x/week): 5 sets per session across three workouts. Very manageable per-session volume with maximum freshness, but programming becomes complex.
The research on set quality supports spreading volume across multiple sessions. A study by Amirthalingam et al. (2017) found that performance (measured by repetitions completed at a given intensity) declines significantly after the first few sets in a session, particularly when multiple exercises for the same muscle group are performed consecutively.
The Full Body Split
What It Is
A full body split trains every major muscle group in every workout session, typically performed three days per week with a rest day between each session. This was the standard approach for decades in the pre-bodybuilding era, and it has seen a resurgence in recent years as frequency research has become more widely known.
Advantages
- High frequency: Each muscle group is trained three times per week, which aligns well with the research on frequency and muscle protein synthesis (MPS). MPS remains elevated for roughly 24-48 hours after training in trained individuals, so stimulating it more frequently could theoretically lead to more total time in an anabolic state.
- Flexible scheduling: You only need three days per week. Miss a session? You have still hit every muscle group twice that week.
- Lower per-session volume: Each workout has fewer sets per muscle group, which means each set is performed with less accumulated fatigue and higher quality.
- Great for beginners: The frequent practice of movement patterns accelerates skill acquisition for compound lifts.
Disadvantages
- Long workouts: If you are trying to accumulate meaningful volume for every muscle group in a single session, workouts can run 75-90+ minutes.
- Programming complexity: You need to manage fatigue across multiple competing demands. Heavy squats affect your ability to do heavy rows in the same session. Exercise order matters more.
- Limited exercise variety: With time constraints, you are typically limited to 1-2 exercises per muscle group per session, which can limit the training angles and stimulus variation.
- Recovery demands at advanced levels: Advanced lifters who need high volumes to progress may find it difficult to recover from three heavy full body sessions per week.
Sample Full Body Program (3 Days/Week)
- Monday: Squat 4x6, Bench Press 4x6, Barbell Row 3x8, Romanian Deadlift 3x10, Lateral Raise 3x15, Tricep Pushdown 2x12
- Wednesday: Deadlift 4x5, Overhead Press 4x6, Pull-ups 3x8, Leg Press 3x10, Face Pulls 3x15, Barbell Curl 2x12
- Friday: Front Squat 4x8, Incline Bench 4x8, Cable Row 3x10, Walking Lunge 3x12, Lateral Raise 3x15, Dips 2x12
The Bro Split
What It Is
The traditional bodybuilding split where each muscle group gets its own dedicated training day, typically trained once per week. A classic bro split might look like: Monday Chest, Tuesday Back, Wednesday Shoulders, Thursday Arms, Friday Legs. Sometimes called a body-part split.
Advantages
- High volume per session: You can dedicate an entire workout to one or two muscle groups, allowing for multiple exercises, angles, and intensity techniques. This is great for advanced lifters who need high volumes to progress.
- Simple programming: Each day has a clear focus. You do not need to balance competing demands within a single session.
- Excellent pump and mind-muscle connection: Spending an entire session on one muscle group produces significant metabolic stress and allows you to really focus on the contraction quality.
- Proven track record: Essentially every competitive bodybuilder from the 1970s through the 2000s used some variation of a bro split. The physiques produced speak for themselves, even if the enhanced recovery from certain substances may have played a role.
Disadvantages
- Low frequency: Each muscle group is trained only once per week. As discussed, the research suggests this is suboptimal compared to twice-per-week frequency when total volume is equated.
- Set quality degradation: When you perform 15-20 sets for chest in a single session, the later sets are performed in a significantly fatigued state. The stimulus quality of set 18 is much lower than set 3.
- Five to six days required: A proper bro split requires 5-6 training days per week. Miss a day, and that muscle group goes two weeks between sessions.
- Wasted potential for natural lifters: Muscle protein synthesis returns to baseline approximately 36-48 hours after training in experienced lifters. With a bro split, you stimulate MPS for roughly two days and then let it sit dormant for five days until the next session.
Sample Bro Split Program (5 Days/Week)
- Monday (Chest): Bench Press 4x8, Incline DB Press 4x10, Cable Flye 3x12, Dips 3x10, Pec Deck 3x15
- Tuesday (Back): Deadlift 4x5, Pull-ups 4x8, Barbell Row 4x8, Cable Row 3x10, Straight-arm Pulldown 3x12
- Wednesday (Shoulders): Overhead Press 4x8, Lateral Raise 4x15, Face Pull 3x15, Rear Delt Flye 3x15, Shrugs 3x12
- Thursday (Arms): Barbell Curl 4x10, Skull Crusher 4x10, Hammer Curl 3x12, Overhead Tricep Extension 3x12, Preacher Curl 3x12, Tricep Pushdown 3x15
- Friday (Legs): Squat 4x6, Romanian Deadlift 4x8, Leg Press 3x10, Walking Lunge 3x12, Leg Curl 3x12, Calf Raise 4x15
The Push/Pull/Legs Split
What It Is
PPL divides training into three categories: push movements (chest, shoulders, triceps), pull movements (back, biceps, rear delts), and legs (quadriceps, hamstrings, glutes, calves). The standard implementation runs it twice per week over six training days: Push, Pull, Legs, Push, Pull, Legs, Rest.
Advantages
- Twice-per-week frequency: Each muscle group is trained twice per week, which aligns with the research sweet spot for hypertrophy.
- Manageable per-session volume: Volume is split across two sessions per muscle group, so each workout has a reasonable number of sets without excessive fatigue accumulation.
- Logical groupings: Muscles that work together are trained together. Bench press also works triceps and front delts, so grouping push movements prevents redundant training the next day.
- Good exercise variety: Two push days allow you to use different exercises, rep ranges, or intensity techniques in each session (e.g., heavy flat bench Monday, lighter incline work Thursday).
- Scalable: Works for intermediates and advanced lifters. Volume can be adjusted by adding or removing sets without restructuring the entire program.
Disadvantages
- Six days per week: The standard PPL requires six training days. This is a significant time commitment that many people cannot sustain long-term.
- Recovery demands: Three consecutive training days before a rest day can accumulate systemic fatigue, especially for lifters who train with high intensity.
- Rigid structure: Missing one day throws off the rotation. If you miss Pull day, your back goes the better part of a week between sessions.
- Leg day avoidance: Two leg days per week is where a lot of people give up on PPL. The temptation to skip the second leg day is real.
Sample PPL Program (6 Days/Week)
- Monday (Push A): Bench Press 4x6, Overhead Press 3x8, Incline DB Press 3x10, Lateral Raise 3x15, Tricep Pushdown 3x12, Overhead Tricep Extension 2x15
- Tuesday (Pull A): Barbell Row 4x6, Pull-ups 3x8, Cable Row 3x10, Face Pull 3x15, Barbell Curl 3x10, Hammer Curl 2x12
- Wednesday (Legs A): Squat 4x6, Romanian Deadlift 3x8, Leg Press 3x10, Leg Curl 3x12, Calf Raise 4x15
- Thursday (Push B): Overhead Press 4x6, Incline Bench 3x8, Cable Flye 3x12, Lateral Raise 4x15, Dips 3x10, Tricep Pushdown 2x15
- Friday (Pull B): Deadlift 4x5, Chest-Supported Row 3x10, Lat Pulldown 3x10, Rear Delt Flye 3x15, Preacher Curl 3x12, Cable Curl 2x15
- Saturday (Legs B): Front Squat 4x8, Hip Thrust 3x10, Walking Lunge 3x12, Leg Extension 3x12, Leg Curl 3x12, Calf Raise 4x15
- Sunday: Rest
Honorable Mention: Upper/Lower
Before we get to the comparison, we need to mention Upper/Lower, which is arguably the most underrated split available. It divides training into upper body and lower body days, typically run four days per week: Upper, Lower, Rest, Upper, Lower, Rest, Rest.
Upper/Lower gives you twice-per-week frequency for every muscle group with only four training days. It is the most time-efficient way to hit the research-supported frequency target. The trade-off is that upper body days can become long since you are training chest, back, shoulders, and arms in a single session.
For people who can train four days per week and want to maximize their results relative to time invested, Upper/Lower is arguably the optimal choice. It does not get the attention it deserves because it is not as glamorous as PPL or as traditional as bro splits, but the programming logic is sound.
Head-to-Head Comparison
| Factor | Full Body | Bro Split | PPL | Upper/Lower |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Frequency/muscle | 3x/week | 1x/week | 2x/week | 2x/week |
| Days required | 3 | 5-6 | 6 | 4 |
| Session length | 60-90 min | 45-75 min | 60-75 min | 60-75 min |
| Best for beginners? | Excellent | Suboptimal | Good | Good |
| Best for advanced? | Challenging | Proven | Excellent | Good |
| Volume capacity | Moderate | Very high | High | Moderate-High |
| Schedule flexibility | High | Low | Low | Moderate |
| Set quality | Very high | Moderate | High | High |
Which Split Is Best for You?
Choose Full Body If:
- You can only train 3 days per week
- You are a beginner (less than 1 year of consistent training)
- You want maximum schedule flexibility
- You prefer compound-heavy training with less isolation work
- You are primarily training for strength rather than bodybuilding
Choose the Bro Split If:
- You are an advanced lifter who needs very high volume per muscle group to continue progressing
- You can train 5-6 days per week consistently without missing sessions
- You genuinely enjoy the bodybuilding-style training experience (pump, isolation work, mind-muscle connection)
- You have experimented with higher-frequency approaches and did not see better results
- You are on performance-enhancing drugs (which significantly extend the muscle protein synthesis window, making once-per-week training more viable)
Choose PPL If:
- You can commit to 6 days per week
- You are an intermediate or advanced lifter
- You want twice-per-week frequency with good exercise variety
- You like having dedicated training themes for each session
- You want the flexibility to vary exercises and intensities between the two sessions (e.g., heavy Push A, hypertrophy Push B)
Choose Upper/Lower If:
- You can train 4 days per week
- You want twice-per-week frequency with the least time commitment
- You are an intermediate lifter who has outgrown full body but does not have time for PPL
- You want a balanced approach that does not require six days in the gym
Progressive Overload Within Each Split
Regardless of which split you choose, progressive overload is the engine that drives adaptation. Your muscles do not grow because you showed up -- they grow because you forced them to do more than they did before. The split is just the vehicle. The driver is progressive overload.
There are several ways to implement progressive overload, and some are better suited to certain splits than others:
Adding Weight (Load Progression)
The most straightforward form of overload. If you benched 185 for 3x8 last week, try 190 this week. This works well in all splits but is easiest to implement in full body and upper/lower programs where you are hitting each lift with high frequency and can make small, consistent jumps.
The reality for intermediate and advanced lifters is that linear weight progression (adding weight every session) stops working relatively quickly. Once you are past the beginner phase, you might add weight to a lift every 2-4 weeks rather than every session. This is normal and expected. If someone tells you that you should be adding weight to the bar every single workout after your first year of training, they are either misinformed or selling a program.
Adding Reps (Rep Progression)
Keep the weight the same and aim for more reps over time. This is an underrated form of progression that works well in all splits. A practical method: pick a weight, use it until you can complete the top of your rep range for all sets (e.g., 3x12 instead of 3x8-10), then increase the weight and start the rep range over.
This approach, sometimes called double progression, is one of the most sustainable long-term progression methods. It ensures you are actually getting stronger within a rep range before jumping to a heavier weight, and it reduces the risk of ego-loading with weights you cannot actually handle for quality reps.
Adding Sets (Volume Progression)
Gradually increasing the number of sets per muscle group over time is a valid progression strategy, particularly for hypertrophy. This works best in bro splits and PPL where you have dedicated time for each muscle group. In a full body split, adding sets is more challenging because it makes already-long sessions even longer.
The important caveat: volume cannot increase indefinitely. Most people benefit from periodically reducing volume (a deload or low-volume phase) to dissipate accumulated fatigue before pushing volume back up. A common approach is to increase volume over 4-6 weeks, then deload for a week, and start a new volume progression from a slightly higher baseline than the previous cycle.
Improving Technique
This is the form of progression nobody wants to talk about because it is not as satisfying as adding plates. But for most lifters, improving exercise technique -- better bar path, more controlled eccentrics, fuller range of motion, improved mind-muscle connection -- provides meaningful additional stimulus without any external changes to the program.
The quality of each rep matters. Ten mediocre reps at 225 produce less hypertrophic stimulus than eight controlled, full-range-of-motion reps at 205. This is not an excuse to lift light -- it is an argument for lifting the heaviest weight you can handle with proper form.
Recovery: The Variable Nobody Wants to Discuss
Your split does not exist in a vacuum. It exists within the context of your total life stress, sleep quality, nutrition, and recovery capacity. Two people can run the same PPL program and get completely different results because one sleeps 8 hours and eats enough food, and the other sleeps 5 hours and eats like a college student.
Sleep
Sleep is not optional for muscle growth. Growth hormone release, testosterone production, and muscle protein synthesis are all heavily influenced by sleep quality and duration. Most adults need 7-9 hours for optimal recovery. If you are training hard on 5-6 hours of sleep, you are handicapping your results regardless of your split.
Anecdotally, one of the most common reasons people stall on high-frequency splits (full body 3x, PPL 6x) is inadequate sleep. The training volume is creating more recovery demand than their body can meet given the amount of sleep they are getting. Sometimes the answer is not "change your split" -- it is "go to bed earlier."
Nutrition
As we say often at HonestLifter, you cannot out-train a bad diet, and you cannot out-split one either. If you are not eating enough total calories and enough protein, it does not matter which split you choose. A caloric surplus (or at least maintenance) is generally required for optimal muscle growth. Protein intake in the range of 1.6-2.2g per kilogram of body weight per day is the evidence-based target. Read our full breakdown in The Protein Timing Myth.
Life Stress
Work stress, relationship stress, financial stress -- these are all forms of systemic stress that compete with training stress for your body's recovery resources. During periods of high life stress, your tolerance for training volume decreases. This is a legitimate reason to temporarily switch from a 6-day PPL to a 4-day upper/lower or even a 3-day full body. There is nothing weak about adjusting your training to match your current recovery capacity. It is smart programming.
Common Mistakes People Make With Each Split
Full Body Mistakes
- Trying to do too many exercises per session. You are training everything in one workout -- you cannot do 4 exercises per muscle group. Stick to 1-2 exercises per major muscle group and focus on compounds.
- Going too heavy every session. Training a movement pattern three times per week means at least one of those sessions should be lighter or focused on a different rep range. You cannot max out on squats three days a week and expect to recover.
- Neglecting smaller muscle groups. It is tempting to just do squats, bench, and rows and call it full body. But your side delts, rear delts, biceps, and calves need direct work too. Budget at least a little time for isolation movements.
Bro Split Mistakes
- Too much junk volume. Just because you have a full session dedicated to chest does not mean you need 25 sets. After a certain point, you are just accumulating fatigue without productive stimulus. Quality over quantity.
- Skipping leg day. This is a meme for a reason. If you are going to run a 5-day bro split, you have to actually train legs. An upper-body-only bro split is not a training program -- it is a vanity project.
- Relying on machines and isolation only. Compound movements should still form the foundation of each session, even in a bro split. Start with a heavy compound, then move to isolation work.
PPL Mistakes
- Making both sessions identical. The advantage of PPL is that you get two sessions per movement pattern. Use them differently. Heavy compound focus on day 1, higher-rep hypertrophy focus on day 2. Vary the exercises.
- Not actually resting on rest day. Sunday is rest. Not "light cardio" or "active recovery" or "just abs." Rest. Your body needs it after six straight days of training.
- Underdoing pull volume. Most people naturally push harder on push day than pull day. Your back and rear delts need at least as much volume as your chest and front delts, if not more, for both aesthetic balance and shoulder health.
Final Thoughts
Here is the uncomfortable truth that the internet does not want to hear: the differences between these splits, assuming volume and effort are equated, are much smaller than most people think. A well-executed bro split will beat a poorly executed PPL every time. Consistency, progressive overload, adequate nutrition, and sufficient sleep matter far more than which split you choose.
The "best" split is the one you can stick with. If you love training six days a week and PPL keeps you engaged, do PPL. If you can only make it to the gym three times, do full body. If you have been doing bro splits for years and you are still making progress, there is no urgent reason to switch.
What the research does tell us with reasonable confidence is that training each muscle group at least twice per week is probably slightly better than once per week for hypertrophy. If your current split only hits each muscle once per week and you are not making progress, increasing frequency is one of the first levers you should pull.
But do not let anyone tell you that their split is "the only way" or that your split is "wrong." That person is selling you something, even if it is just their ego. Train hard, train consistently, eat enough food, sleep enough hours, and your split will work. That is what we believe at HonestLifter, and it is what the evidence supports.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is full body good for beginners?
Full body training is excellent for beginners. It allows you to practice compound movement patterns like squats, bench press, and rows three times per week, which accelerates skill acquisition and motor learning. The high frequency also means each muscle group gets stimulated multiple times per week, aligning with research showing that training a muscle at least twice per week produces superior hypertrophic results compared to once per week. Most beginner programs like Starting Strength and StrongLifts are full body for exactly these reasons.
How many days per week for PPL?
A standard Push/Pull/Legs (PPL) split requires six training days per week, run as Push, Pull, Legs, Push, Pull, Legs, Rest. This gives each muscle group two training sessions per week, which is the research-supported sweet spot for hypertrophy. Some people run PPL over five days by rotating sessions, but this changes the frequency and can make scheduling inconsistent. If you cannot commit to six days, an Upper/Lower split (four days) provides the same twice-per-week frequency with less time commitment.
Can you build muscle with full body?
Yes, you can absolutely build muscle with a full body program. Research by Schoenfeld et al. (2016) found that training each muscle group at least twice per week (which full body programs do three times per week) produces superior hypertrophic outcomes compared to once per week. The key is managing total weekly volume and progressive overload. Full body programs work especially well for beginners and intermediates. Advanced lifters may find it harder to accumulate enough volume per muscle group in full body sessions without excessively long workouts.
Is bro split dead?
No, the bro split is not dead. While research suggests that training each muscle group at least twice per week is slightly superior to once per week for hypertrophy, a well-executed bro split still works. Decades of bodybuilders have built impressive physiques on body-part splits. The advantage of bro splits is the ability to accumulate very high volume per muscle group and focus on mind-muscle connection. For advanced lifters who need extreme volume to progress, a bro split remains a viable option. The differences between splits, when effort and total volume are equated, are smaller than most people think.
What split do pro bodybuilders use?
Most professional bodybuilders use some variation of a body-part split (bro split) or a modified PPL. Common approaches include training each major muscle group with its own dedicated day across five to six sessions per week. However, it is important to note that professional bodybuilders typically use performance-enhancing drugs, which significantly extend the muscle protein synthesis window and improve recovery. This makes once-per-week frequency more effective for them than it would be for natural lifters. Natural lifters generally benefit more from higher-frequency splits like PPL or Upper/Lower.