How Many Days a Week to Work Out Over 40
This is one of the most common questions I get — and the answer is more nuanced than most people expect. The right training frequency over 40 depends on what you're doing in those sessions, how you're recovering, and what your actual goal is.
The Short Answer
3–4 days per week of resistance training is the sweet spot for most adults over 40. This is enough to stimulate muscle protein synthesis multiple times per week while allowing adequate recovery between sessions. Below 3 days and you're leaving significant results on the table. Above 5 days and most over-40 adults accumulate fatigue faster than they can recover.
Why More Training Isn't Better After 40
Recovery capacity declines with age. Your muscles can rebuild in 48–72 hours. Your central nervous system, tendons, and ligaments take longer. Training 6 days per week at 25 is manageable because your body's recovery machinery runs fast. At 45, the same frequency often outpaces your recovery, leading to cumulative fatigue, nagging injuries, and stalled progress.
This isn't an excuse to train less — it's a reason to train smarter. Three high-quality sessions with full recovery outperform five moderate sessions where you're perpetually under-recovered.
Training frequency matters less than training quality and recovery. Three fully recovered sessions beat five fatigued ones every time.
The Optimal Setup by Goal
Fat loss: 3 strength sessions + 2 low-intensity cardio sessions (walks, bike, swimming). Total of 5 active days, but the cardio is low-impact and doesn't compete with strength recovery.
Muscle building: 4 strength sessions in an upper/lower split. Upper body twice, lower body twice. Each muscle group gets 48–72 hours of recovery before being trained again.
General fitness and health: 3 full-body strength sessions per week is the most efficient setup. Every session trains every major muscle group, you have 4 rest/recovery days, and the program fits easily into any schedule.
What About Cardio?
Low-intensity cardio (walking, cycling at a conversational pace, swimming) can be done daily without meaningful impact on strength recovery. This is your default "active recovery" on non-lifting days. High-intensity cardio — sprints, HIIT, intense cycling classes — has a real recovery cost and should be limited to 1–2 sessions per week maximum if you're also strength training.
The Schedule Most of My Clients Use
Monday: Upper body strength. Wednesday: Lower body strength. Friday: Full body or upper/lower. Saturday or Sunday: optional low-intensity cardio. This provides consistent stimulus twice per muscle group per week, leaves two full recovery days between sessions, and is sustainable around a normal work and life schedule.
Want a complete training schedule built around your specific goals, recovery capacity, and available days?
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