How to Use Progressive Overload Planner
The Progressive Overload Planner is a powerful tool designed to systematize your strength training by generating a structured plan for increasing your workout demands over time. It takes your current lifting metrics and desired progression strategy to project how you can progressively challenge your muscles, which is fundamental for muscle hypertrophy and strength gains.
What It Does
Use the calculator with intent
The Progressive Overload Planner is a powerful tool designed to systematize your strength training by generating a structured plan for increasing your workout demands over time. It takes your current lifting metrics and desired progression strategy to project how you can progressively challenge your muscles, which is fundamental for muscle hypertrophy and strength gains.
This planner is ideal for anyone committed to long-term strength and muscle development, from beginners establishing their first lifting routine to advanced lifters struggling with plateaus. Bodybuilders, powerlifters, and general fitness enthusiasts will find it invaluable for creating a clear, actionable roadmap to consistent progress, eliminating guesswork from their training.
Interpreting Results
Start with Projected working lift. Then compare Starting lift and Peak in block before deciding what changes the answer most.
Input Steps
Field by field
- 1
Current Lift Kg
Enter your current working weight, rep target, and planned weekly load increase. Evidence-based weekly increases: Squat/Deadlift 2.5–5 lbs/week (beginner), 0.5–2.5 lbs/week (intermediate). Bench/Overhead Press 1.25–2.5 lbs/week (beginner), 0.5–1.25 lbs/week (intermediate).
- 2
Weekly Increase Percent
Read the week-by-week projection through your training block. If projected weight reaches your estimated 1RM in fewer than 8 weeks, your weekly increase is too aggressive — cut the weekly jump in half.
- 3
Training Weeks
If you fail to complete all target reps in two consecutive sessions at the same weight, do not progress. Repeat the same weight until you complete the full rep scheme before adding load.
- 4
Deload Every Weeks
Plan a deload every 4–8 weeks: drop to 50–60% of working weight at normal rep volume. This clears accumulated fatigue without losing strength adaptations.
- 5
Deload Drop Percent
After illness, travel, or any layoff longer than 2 weeks, reset the planner from your actual current performance — not where you were before the break. Starting too heavy post-layoff is the leading cause of acute injury.
Run one base case and one sensitivity case before trusting a single output.
Common Scenarios
Use realistic starting points
Baseline assumptions
Current Lift Kg
$100
Weekly Increase Percent
1.5%
Training Weeks
16
Deload Every Weeks
5
Start with projected working lift and compare it with starting lift before changing anything.
Higher Current Lift Kg
Current Lift Kg
$120
Weekly Increase Percent
1.5%
Training Weeks
16
Deload Every Weeks
5
Watch how projected working lift shifts when current lift kg changes while the rest stays steady.
Lower Weekly Increase Percent
Current Lift Kg
$100
Weekly Increase Percent
1%
Training Weeks
16
Deload Every Weeks
5
Watch how projected working lift shifts when weekly increase percent changes while the rest stays steady.
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FAQ
Questions people ask next
The short answers readers usually want after the first pass.
Sources & References
- The Mechanisms of Muscle Hypertrophy and Their Application to Resistance Training — National Institutes of Health (NIH)
- Science and Development of Muscle Hypertrophy — Human Kinetics (Book by Brad Schoenfeld)
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