Table of Contents
What order should I workout muscle groups?
Here’s an example of how you could combine muscle groups using the more detailed groups we outlined:
- Day 1: chest, shoulders, triceps, forearms.
- Day 2: calves, hamstrings, quadriceps, glutes.
- Day 3: biceps, back, abdominals, traps, lats.
How should I divide my workout days?
Divide your weekly workout into a three-day split where you divide upper body work into a push/pull routine over two days and work your lower body on a separate day. A typical three-day split would include chest and triceps work on Day 1, back and biceps on Day 2, and legs and shoulders on Day 3.
Does order of workout matter?
Whether you want to maximize a weight lifting session or a cardio-strength combo workout, research shows the answer is yes: order matters. The study concludes that testosterone production—and therefore muscle recovery and growth—is maximized after completing a cardio-first, strength-second workout.
What is a split routine?
A split routine is a popular training format with strength and mass-dominant athletes such as bodybuilders, football players, shot putters, etc.An example of a two-day body part split routine would be to train chest, shoulders, and triceps on Monday and back,biceps, and legs on Thursday.
Can we do biceps and triceps together?
It is fine to work tricep and biceps on the same day. The biceps and triceps are both located in the upper arm, though they are situated in different areas. Because they belong to different muscle groups: one posterior and one anterior, you can perform biceps and triceps same day workouts.
What is the most effective training split?
push/pull/legs split
The push/pull/legs split is probably the most efficient workout split there is because all related muscle groups are trained together in the same workout. This means that you get the maximum overlap of movements within the same workout, and the muscle groups being trained get an overall benefit from this overlap.