2026 Guide · Intermediates

5-Day Workout Plan: Complete 2026 Guide

Looking for a 5-day workout plan that actually works? This guide shows the best 5-day splits (PPL + Upper/Lower, ABCDE, weak point) with sample workouts and a free AI generator.

Why 5 days a week is the next step

A 5-day split is the natural progression after 12-18 months of 4-day training. More volume, better specialization, more programming flexibility — if recovery is on point.

More weekly volume

5th day adds 6-8 sets/week to lagging muscles.

2x/week frequency

PPL + UL hits each muscle twice a week.

Better specialization

Extra day for a weak point without cutting main sessions.

Shorter sessions

Splitting volume across 5 days keeps sessions in the 60-75 min range.

The 3 best 5-day splits

Three well-documented 5-day structures.

1. PPL + Upper/Lower

Mon Push · Tue Pull · Wed Legs · Fri Upper · Sat Lower

Pros

  • 2x/week frequency
  • Balanced session volume
  • Sensible weekly rest
  • #1 pick for hypertrophy

Cons

  • Needs 5 full sessions
  • Recovery demands are high

Best for: Default 5-day pick for intermediates focused on hypertrophy.

2. ABCDE (5-day bro split)

Mon Chest · Tue Back · Wed Legs · Thu Shoulders · Fri Arms

Pros

  • Very high per-muscle volume per session
  • Simple plan
  • Works for advanced lifters

Cons

  • 1x/week frequency is suboptimal
  • Missed day = 10+ days without stimulus

Best for: For advanced lifters with high volume tolerance.

3. Weak Point Split (5 days)

Mon Upper · Tue Lower · Wed Weak Point · Fri Upper · Sat Lower

Pros

  • Dedicated weak-point day
  • Up to 3x/week frequency on that group
  • Flexible accessory selection

Cons

  • Requires self-assessment
  • More complex programming

Best for: For advanced lifters with clear imbalances.

Complete example: PPL + Upper/Lower (5 days)

Ready-to-follow plan for intermediates with 1-3 years of experience.

RIR = Reps In Reserve. RIR 2 = stop 2 reps short of failure.

Day 1 — Push (chest, shoulders, triceps)

ExerciseSetsRepsRIR
Barbell bench press46-82
Standing overhead press36-102
Incline dumbbell press38-101
Dumbbell lateral raise312-150
Dips38-101
Cable triceps pushdown310-121

Day 2 — Pull (back, biceps, rear delts)

ExerciseSetsRepsRIR
Pull-ups (or lat pulldown)46-102
Barbell row46-82
Wide-grip lat pulldown38-101
Cable face pull312-150
Barbell curl310-121
Hammer curl310-121

Day 3 — Legs (quads, glutes, hams, calves)

ExerciseSetsRepsRIR
Back squat45-82
Romanian deadlift38-102
Leg press310-121
Lying leg curl310-121
Standing calf raise412-151
Hanging leg raises3121

Day 4 — Upper (second upper hit)

ExerciseSetsRepsRIR
Incline barbell bench46-82
One-arm dumbbell row48-102
Seated dumbbell press38-101
Neutral-grip pulldown310-121
Dumbbell French press310-121
Preacher curl310-121

Day 5 — Lower (second lower hit)

ExerciseSetsRepsRIR
Conventional deadlift452
Front squat382
Dumbbell walking lunge310/leg1
Seated leg curl3121
Barbell hip thrust310-121
Seated calf raise4151

Weekly volume: MEV, MAV, MRV

Weekly set ranges per muscle group:

MuscleMEVMAVMRV
Chest8-1014-1820-22
Back10-1216-2022-25
Side delts814-1822
Biceps6-812-1618-20
Triceps6-812-1618-20
Quads8-1014-1820-22
Hamstrings6-810-1416-18
Calves814-1822

Source: Israetel, Renaissance Periodization.

Start at MEV, add 1-2 sets per week toward MAV, then deload.

Who should use a 5-day plan?

Not everyone should train 5 days/week.

Beginners (0-6 months)

Not recommended

Too much volume while learning technique.

Intermediates (12-36 months)

Ideal fit

MEV is past 12 sets/muscle — the 5th day pays off.

Advanced (3+ years)

Great fit

Lets you sit near MAV for every muscle group.

3 days vs 4 days vs 5 days vs 6 days

Feature3 days (Full Body)4 days (UL)5 days (PPL+UL)6 days (PPL x2)
Frequency per muscle3x2x2x (higher V)2x (max V)
Weekly volumeLow-MedMediumMed-HighVery High
Weekly time≈3 h≈4-5 h≈5-6 h≈7-8 h
RecoveryExcellentGoodAdequateTight
Best forBeginnersIntermediatesAdvanced intermediatesAdvanced

5 common 5-day plan mistakes

Jumping to 5 days too early

If you haven't maxed 4 days, the 5th adds fatigue not gains.

Too much volume per session

Cap at 18-20 effective sets per session.

No real rest day

Keep at least 1 full rest day weekly.

Ignoring diet and sleep

7-9 h sleep and 200-400 kcal surplus are mandatory.

No deload

Every 4-6 weeks, cut volume 40-50%.

Your 5-day plan in 30 seconds

Arvo's AI generator builds a personalized 5-day plan from your goal, equipment and level.

  • 5-day plan on your parameters
  • PPL+UL, ABCDE or weak point — your pick
  • Volume calibrated to your level
  • Adaptive AI weight suggestions set by set
  • Automatic deload when data says so
  • Free, no signup required
Generate your free 5-day plan

Frequently Asked Questions

Is 5 days per week better than 4?

Depends on level and recovery. A 5-day split (PPL + Upper/Lower or ABCDE) gives more volume and better specialization but demands more recovery. For intermediates with 12-36 months of training, 5 days usually wins. If life is busy, stay on 4 days.

Does ABCDE still work?

For the right audience, yes. Classic ABCDE (Chest, Back, Legs, Shoulders, Arms) concentrates 18-22 sets per muscle in a single session. The limit is 1x/week frequency — 2x/week is superior at equal volume. PPL + UL wins for most intermediates; ABCDE is fine for advanced lifters.

5 days for beginners?

Usually not. Beginners should run 3-day full body, then 4-day upper/lower, and only after 12-18 months consider 5 days.

Rest between sets?

Compound lifts: 2-4 min. Isolation: 60-90 sec.

Deload on a 5-day plan?

Yes, every 4-6 weeks cut volume by 40-50% for one week.