4-Day Workout Plan: Complete 2026 Guide
Looking for a 4-day workout plan that actually works? This guide shows you the best 4-day splits for hypertrophy and strength with examples and a free AI generator.
Why 4 days a week is the ideal frequency
A 4-day workout plan is the gold standard for intermediates. Each muscle gets trained 2x/week (optimal frequency) while you keep 3 full recovery days.
Optimal 2x/week frequency
Schoenfeld 2016 confirms 2x/week produces more hypertrophy than 1x.
Adequate recovery
3 rest days per week for full CNS and muscle recovery.
Manageable session volume
Shorter, focused sessions with higher per-muscle intensity.
Flexible scheduling
Miss a day and just shift the plan by 24 hours.
The 3 best 4-day splits
The best 4-day split depends on your level, goal and training history.
1. Upper / Lower
Mon Upper A · Tue Lower A · Thu Upper B · Fri Lower B
Pros
- 2x/week frequency
- Simple to program
- Excellent recovery
- Late-beginner to intermediate
Cons
- ✗Upper days can run 75+ minutes
- ✗Less volume per muscle than bro split
Best for: The #1 pick for hypertrophy and strength.
2. Push / Pull + Full Body + Weak Point
Mon Push · Tue Pull · Thu Full Body · Fri Weak Point
Pros
- Shorter, focused sessions
- Emphasize a weak point
- Varied stimulus
Cons
- ✗Full body day is heavy
- ✗Harder programming
Best for: Ideal if you have an obvious weak point.
3. 4-Day Bro Split
Mon Chest + Tri · Tue Back + Bi · Thu Legs · Fri Shoulders + Core
Pros
- Very high per-muscle volume
- Very focused sessions
Cons
- ✗1x/week frequency is suboptimal
- ✗Missed day = 10 days without stimulus
Best for: Only for very advanced lifters.
Complete example: Upper/Lower 4-day plan
Ready-to-follow upper/lower plan for intermediates with 1-3 years of experience.
RIR = Reps In Reserve. RIR 2 = stop 2 reps short of failure.
Day 1 — Upper A (Strength)
| Exercise | Sets | Reps | RIR |
|---|---|---|---|
| Barbell bench press | 4 | 6-8 | 2 |
| Pull-ups (or lat pulldown) | 4 | 6-10 | 2 |
| Standing overhead press | 3 | 8-10 | 2 |
| Barbell row | 3 | 8-10 | 2 |
| EZ-bar triceps extension | 3 | 10-12 | 1 |
| Barbell biceps curl | 3 | 10-12 | 1 |
Day 2 — Lower A (Strength)
| Exercise | Sets | Reps | RIR |
|---|---|---|---|
| Back squat | 4 | 6-8 | 2 |
| Romanian deadlift | 3 | 8-10 | 2 |
| Leg press | 3 | 10-12 | 1 |
| Lying leg curl | 3 | 10-12 | 1 |
| Standing calf raise | 4 | 12-15 | 1 |
| Plank | 3 | 45-60 sec | - |
Day 3 — Upper B (Hypertrophy)
| Exercise | Sets | Reps | RIR |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overhead press (or Arnold press) | 4 | 6-8 | 2 |
| T-bar row | 4 | 6-10 | 2 |
| 30° incline dumbbell press | 3 | 8-10 | 1 |
| Close-grip lat pulldown | 3 | 8-10 | 1 |
| Dumbbell lateral raise | 3 | 12-15 | 0 |
| Hammer curl | 3 | 10-12 | 1 |
Day 4 — Lower B (Hypertrophy)
| Exercise | Sets | Reps | RIR |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conventional deadlift | 4 | 5 | 2 |
| Front squat (or hack squat) | 3 | 8 | 2 |
| Dumbbell walking lunge | 3 | 10 per leg | 1 |
| Seated leg curl | 3 | 12 | 1 |
| Seated calf raise | 4 | 15 | 1 |
| Machine crunch | 3 | 15 | 1 |
Weekly volume: MEV, MAV, MRV
Weekly set ranges per muscle:
| Muscle | MEV | MAV | MRV |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chest | 8-10 | 12-16 | 18-22 |
| Back | 10-12 | 14-18 | 20-25 |
| Side delts | 8 | 12-16 | 20 |
| Biceps | 6-8 | 10-14 | 16-20 |
| Triceps | 6-8 | 10-14 | 16-20 |
| Quads | 8-10 | 12-16 | 18-22 |
| Hamstrings | 6-8 | 10-14 | 14-18 |
| Calves | 8 | 12-16 | 20 |
Source: Israetel, Renaissance Periodization.
Start at MEV, add 1-2 sets weekly toward MAV, then deload.
Who should use a 4-day plan?
Not every plan fits every lifter.
Beginners (0-6 months)
Borderline
A 3-day full body is usually more efficient.
Intermediates (6-24 months)
Ideal fit
The 4-day split is the #1 pick here.
Advanced (2+ years)
Great fit
4 days still works, especially with a weak-point day.
3 days vs 4 days vs 5-6 days
| Feature | 3 days (Full Body) | 4 days (UL) | 5-6 days (PPL) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Frequency per muscle | 3x/week | 2x/week (optimal) | 2x/week |
| Weekly time | ≈3 h | ≈4-5 h | ≈6-7 h |
| Volume per muscle | Low-Medium | Medium-High | Very High |
| Recovery | Excellent | Good | Tight |
| Best for | Beginners / busy lifters | Intermediates | Advanced |
5 common 4-day split mistakes
Too much volume, too fast
Start at MEV and build up.
Rest too short
Use 2-4 min on compounds.
Changing program every 4 weeks
Keep it for 8-12 weeks.
Skipping deloads
Every 4-6 weeks, cut volume 40-50%.
Not tracking weights
Log every set or use an app.
Want a 4-day plan built around you?
Arvo's AI creates a 4-day plan in 30 seconds based on your goal, equipment and experience.
- 4-day plan on your specific parameters
- Upper/lower, PPL+FB or bro split — your choice
- Volume calibrated to your level (MEV/MAV/MRV)
- Adaptive AI weight suggestions set by set
- Automatic deload when data says so
- Free, no signup required
Frequently Asked Questions
How long to see results with a 4-day workout plan?
Strength gains show after 3-4 weeks of consistent training. Visible muscle growth takes 8-12 weeks combined with a 200-400 kcal surplus and 7-9 hours of sleep. The 2x per muscle frequency is the main reason a 4-day split outperforms a 1x/week bro split.
4 days or 3 days — what's better for beginners?
Absolute beginners (0-6 months) benefit most from a 3-day full body plan. A 4-day plan (upper/lower or push/pull) is ideal for intermediates with 6+ months of experience.
Upper/lower, PPL or bro split — which 4-day split?
Upper/lower is the #1 pick for most intermediates. Push/pull + full body/weak point is more flexible. 4-day bro split is only for very advanced lifters.
Can I use a 4-day plan to lose weight?
Yes. Reduce volume 10-15%, keep loads high, add 2-3 light cardio sessions on rest days. 300-500 kcal deficit with 1.8-2.2 g protein/kg.
Rest between sets?
Compound lifts 2-4 min, isolation 60-90 sec.