Is training two or four times per week superior for strength and hypertrophy?

This study aimed to compare two and four times per week training frequencies with matched volumes on gains in muscle strength and size.

James de Lacey

By James de Lacey
Last updated: March 15th, 2023
4 min read

Is training two or four times per week superior for strength and hypertrophy?

Increasing training frequency can allow athletes to boost training volume without negatively affecting workout quality. Therefore, training more frequently could be a tool for increasing muscle mass.

James de Lacey

By James de Lacey
Last updated: March 15th, 2023
4 min read

Contents of this Research Review

  1. Objective
  2. What They Did
  3. What They Found
  4. Practical Takeaways
  5. Reviewer’s Comments
  6. About the Reviewer
  7. Comments

It does appear that taining frequency can be used as a tool to enhance strength and hypertrophy.

Original study

Hamarsland, H., Moen, H., Skaar, O. J., Jorang, P. W., Rødahl, H. S., & Rønnestad, B. Equal-volume strength training with different training frequencies induces similar muscle hypertrophy and strength improvement in trained participants. Frontiers in Physiology, 2374.

Click here for abstract

Objective

The current consensus around training frequency and strength and hypertrophy gains is that training frequency does not have an impact when total training volume is matched. However, these studies are limited and mostly performed with untrained subjects. Further, no study has investigated whether increased training frequency benefits complex strength exercises (e.g. squat) in trained lifters.

Therefore, this study aimed to compare two and four times per week training frequencies with matched volumes on gains in muscle strength and size.

What They Did

Thirty-four resistance trained men and women (age = 18-35 yr) were randomised into a high frequency (HF) and low frequency (LF) training group. The training intervention lasted nine weeks, with HF completing four weekly sessions and LF completing two weekly sessions. Volume was matched at 32 weekly sets.

Squat and bench press (complex exercises), hack squat and chest press (simple exercises) 1RMs were tested before and after the training intervention. Body composition was measured with DXA and muscle thickness of the vastus lateralis was measured with ultrasonography before and after the training intervention.

What They Found

There was no significant difference in 1RM improvements in any lift between HF and LF. Squat (HF: 16.3 ± 5.2 kg, LF: 14.8 ± 4.2 kg), hack squat (HF: 33.4 ± 13.9 kg, LF: 34.4 ± 9.7 kg), bench press (HF: 7.5 ± 3.5 kg, LF: 7.7 ± 3.0 kg), and chest press (HF: 15.9 ± 13.8 kg, LF: 15.0 ± 5.0 kg). Further, there were no significant differences between HF and LF for any measure of muscle growth (body composition and ultrasonography).

Simple lower body exercise showed greater improvement in 1RM than complex exercise in both groups. Hack squat 1RM (HF: 62.5 ± 48.8%, LF: 50.2 ± 23.6%) vs. squat 1RM (HF: 19.1 ± 10.3%, LF: 18.7 ± 8.6%). Only the HF group saw greater improvements in simple exercise strength whereas the LF group showed no differences (chest press 1RM: 31.2 ± 27.9%; bench press 1RM: 15.8 ± 11.5%).

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Practical Takeaways

When volume is matched, training frequency does not seem to play a role in increasing strength and hypertrophy. However, training frequency can be used as a tool to enhance strength and hypertrophy. Here’s how:

  • Increasing training frequency can allow you to increase training volume without negatively affecting workout quality. As there is a dose-response relationship between volume and hypertrophy (see HERE), increasing training frequency could be a tool for increasing muscle mass.
  • Spreading your working sets of main lifts throughout the week can potentially keep you fresher, increasing the quality (bar speed) of your sets. For example, if you have 20 sets of squats to perform in the week, knocking them off over 3-4 sessions is going to be better for managing fatigue then performing all sets in one session. Further, it has been suggested that 10 sets is the upper limit per muscle group per workout before workout quality suffers (e.g. this study).
  • For the athlete population, increasing training frequency can be a form of microdosing. As strength training is less important than technical/tactical training for sports performance, performing shorter workouts spread throughout the week can be a way to manage fatigue and get small hits of high-intensity neural work. Ideally, you will be able to make strength and power gains without the need for long, fatiguing gym sessions.
  • James de Lacey’s comments

    “While this study focused on training frequency, it potentially highlighted one of Issurin’s principles of training volume which is exercise novelty. As the hack squat and chest press were likely novel exercises (compared to the squat and bench press), it could explain why such drastic gains were seen in those exercises compared to the common squat and bench.

    “Regarding strength training frequency, for most sports, I believe 2-3 days is more than enough. Four days can be useful during the pre-season, especially in collision sports where muscle mass plays a vital role in protecting an athlete in contact.”

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    James de Lacey

    James de Lacey

    James was the Head Strength & Conditioning Coach for the Romanian Rugby Union. He has previously worked in America’s professional rugby competition Major League Rugby with Austin Elite and the NZ Women’s National Rugby League Team. He is a published author and has completed a MSc in Sport & Exercise Science from AUT, Auckland, NZ.

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    James de Lacey

    James de Lacey

    James was the Head Strength & Conditioning Coach for the Romanian Rugby Union. He has previously worked in America’s professional rugby competition Major League Rugby with Austin Elite and the NZ Women’s National Rugby League Team. He is a published author and has completed a MSc in Sport & Exercise Science from AUT, Auckland, NZ.

    More content by James
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