The Best 4-Day General Fitness Workout Split for Advanced Lifters
Advanced general fitness athletes on 4 days use a Conjugate-inspired approach: each day has a clear physical quality target — maximum strength, power, muscular endurance, or aerobic capacity. The four-day structure allows sufficient volume per quality without diluting the training stimulus across too many qualities per session. Think: heavy barbell day, explosive/power day, muscular endurance circuit day, long aerobic day.
The Weekly Layout
| Day | Session |
|---|---|
| Day 1 (Monday) | Upper Body |
| Day 2 (Tuesday) | Lower Body |
| Day 3 (Wednesday) | Rest / Active Recovery |
| Day 4 (Thursday) | Upper Body |
| Day 5 (Friday) | Lower Body |
| Day 6 | Rest |
| Day 7 | Rest |
Exact Exercise Selection
Day 1: Upper Body A
Pressing and pulling strength
| Exercise | Sets | Reps |
|---|---|---|
| Barbell Bench Press | 3 | 10–15 |
| Barbell or Dumbbell Row | 3 | 10–15 |
| Overhead Press | 3 | 10–15 |
| Pull-Up | 3 | 10–15 |
| Dumbbell Lateral Raise | 3 | 15 |
| Bicep Curl | 2–3 | 12 |
| Triceps Pushdown | 2–3 | 12 |
Day 2: Lower Body A
Quad-dominant lower body
| Exercise | Sets | Reps |
|---|---|---|
| Back Squat | 3 | 10–15 |
| Romanian Deadlift | 3 | 8–10 |
| Leg Press | 3 | 10–12 |
| Walking Lunge | 3 | 10 per leg |
| Leg Curl | 3 | 12 |
| Calf Raise | 4 | 15–20 |
Day 3: Upper Body B
Hypertrophy-focused upper
| Exercise | Sets | Reps |
|---|---|---|
| Incline Dumbbell Press | 3 | 10–15 |
| Seated Cable Row | 3 | 10–15 |
| Incline Dumbbell Press | 3 | 6–12 |
| Face Pull | 3 | 15 |
| Cable Fly | 3 | 12–15 |
| Hammer Curl | 3 | 12 |
| Skull Crusher or Dip | 3 | 12 |
Day 4: Lower Body B
Posterior chain emphasis
| Exercise | Sets | Reps |
|---|---|---|
| Deadlift | 3 | 6–8 |
| Bulgarian Split Squat | 3 | 8–10 per leg |
| Leg Press (feet high) | 3 | 10–12 |
| Glute Ham Raise or Hip Thrust | 3 | 10–12 |
| Calf Raise | 4 | 15–20 |
Progression Protocol
Progress each physical quality independently: add weight to strength movements every 1–2 weeks, increase cardio duration by 5–10% each week (10% rule), and add complexity to skill/movement work monthly.
Use the principle of specificity: if your goal is to improve at a specific activity (running, sport), spend 80% of cardio work mimicking that activity. Strength work is supporting, not primary.
Monthly deload: reduce total training volume by 30–40% for one week every 4–6 weeks. General fitness athletes often skip deloads because sessions feel varied, but cumulative fatigue still accumulates.
Track performance metrics: log 1-rep maxes quarterly, 1-mile run time monthly, and body composition every 6 weeks. Without measurement, progress is invisible.
Common Mistakes at This Level
Becoming a jack of all trades, master of none. Advanced general fitness requires a seasonal approach: pick one quality to prioritise for 8–12 weeks (strength, endurance, power) while maintaining others.
Neglecting injury prevention. Advanced general fitness athletes sustain high training volumes across multiple modalities — cumulative joint stress, tendon loading, and overuse injuries increase. Prehab and load management are mandatory.
Ignoring periodisation for conditioning. Advanced cardiovascular fitness requires the same block structure as strength: base building, development, peaking, and recovery phases within the annual plan.
How to Adjust Based on Recovery
Cora tracks your Heart Rate Variability (HRV) daily and compares it against your personal baseline. When your HRV is suppressed — a signal that your nervous system hasn't fully recovered — Cora's AI coach automatically modifies that day's session before you walk into the gym. Advanced lifters are simultaneously closest to their physical limits and most adapted to tolerating training stress — this makes overreaching harder to feel subjectively. HRV monitoring becomes critical here. Cora's algorithm tracks both morning HRV and within-session performance trends. When both trend downward simultaneously, it triggers a block-level adjustment: shorten the current intensification block by 1 week and insert a realisation phase earlier. This prevents accumulated fatigue from masking the strength gains that were building during the block.
Alternatives If You Have Less Time
If you only have 3 days per week: run the 3-day Full Body variant instead. For this goal, 3 days with full body compound work preserves the key training stimulus. The drop in training frequency is minimal — the drop in results is small.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long should I run this 4-day general fitness program before changing it?
Run it for at least 8–12 weeks before evaluating. Beginners can run the same template for 12–16 weeks due to the novelty effect. Intermediate lifters typically need to change the stimulus (rep ranges, exercises, or volume) every 4–6 weeks within a program while keeping the same split structure. The most common mistake is program-hopping every 3–4 weeks — you cannot assess effectiveness in under 8 weeks.
Can I do this 4-day split if I'm advanced?
This program is specifically designed for advanced lifters. Advanced programs require discipline in autoregulation — matching effort to readiness, not just following numbers. Use RPE as your primary guide.
What should I eat on training days vs rest days?
For general fitness, focus on eating enough to support your training volume. A slight caloric surplus (200–300 kcal) on heavy training days and maintenance or slight deficit on lighter/rest days is a simple, effective approach.
How long should each session take?
50–70 minutes per session. Upper body days and lower body days have different fatigue profiles — lower body sessions may run 5–10 minutes longer due to longer inter-set recovery needs on heavy squats and deadlifts.
Should I do cardio on top of this program?
2–3 cardio sessions per week at low-to-moderate intensity complement this program well. Keep cardio sessions under 45 minutes and place them on rest days or after (not before) lifting sessions.
How do I balance strength, cardio, and flexibility in this program?
General fitness requires allocating training time across multiple physical qualities. The 80/20 rule applies: 80% of your time on strength and aerobic capacity (the two qualities with the highest health and performance returns), 20% on flexibility, mobility, power, and skill work. For this 4-day program, strength sessions and conditioning sessions are already built in. Add 10 minutes of mobility work at the end of each session and one dedicated flexibility/yoga session per week if mobility is a limiting factor.
Let Cora Adapt This Plan to Your Recovery
Static programs ignore your body’s readiness signals. Cora uses daily HRV data to automatically adjust your 4-day general fitness plan — heavier when you’re recovered, lighter when you need it.
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