The Best 5-Day Fat Loss Workout Split for Advanced Lifters
Five-day advanced fat-loss programming: three heavy strength sessions (squat, bench, deadlift focus at 75–85% 1RM) and two moderate hypertrophy sessions (10–15 reps at 65–70% 1RM). The hypertrophy sessions double as metabolic work — shorter rest periods (60–90 sec) amplify caloric expenditure without compromising the strength sessions. This approach is used by advanced physique athletes during competition prep to retain muscle while dieting.
The Weekly Layout
| Day | Session |
|---|---|
| Day 1 (Monday) | Push (Chest, Shoulders, Triceps) |
| Day 2 (Tuesday) | Cardio / HIIT |
| Day 3 (Wednesday) | Pull (Back, Biceps) |
| Day 4 (Thursday) | Legs (Quad + Posterior Chain) |
| Day 5 (Friday) | Cardio / Metabolic Conditioning |
| Day 6 | Rest or Light Walk |
| Day 7 | Rest |
Exact Exercise Selection
Day 1: Push
Chest, Shoulders, Triceps
| Exercise | Sets | Reps |
|---|---|---|
| Barbell Bench Press | 3 | 10–15 |
| Overhead Press | 3–4 | 10–15 |
| Incline Dumbbell Press | 3 | 6–12 |
| Dumbbell Lateral Raise | 4 | 15–20 |
| Cable Front Raise | 3 | 12–15 |
| Triceps Pushdown | 3 | 12–15 |
| Overhead Triceps Extension | 3 | 12–15 |
Day 2: Cardio / HIIT
Cardiovascular conditioning
| Exercise | Sets | Reps |
|---|---|---|
| Warm-up | 1 | 5 min easy |
| HIIT Intervals (bike/rower/treadmill) | 8–10 | 30 sec on / 30 sec off |
| Steady-State Cardio (optional) | 1 | 15–20 min |
Day 2: Pull
Back, Biceps, Rear Delts
| Exercise | Sets | Reps |
|---|---|---|
| Weighted Pull-Up | 3 | 10–15 |
| Barbell Row | 3–4 | 10–15 |
| Seated Cable Row | 3 | 6–12 |
| Face Pull | 4 | 15–20 |
| Dumbbell or EZ-Bar Curl | 3–4 | 10–12 |
| Hammer Curl | 3 | 12 |
| Reverse Curl | 2 | 15 |
Day 3: Legs
Quad, Hamstring, Glute, Calf
| Exercise | Sets | Reps |
|---|---|---|
| Back Squat | 3 | 10–15 |
| Romanian Deadlift | 3–4 | 8–10 |
| Leg Press | 3 | 15 |
| Walking Lunge | 3 | 10 per leg |
| Leg Extension | 3 | 12–15 |
| Leg Curl | 3 | 12–15 |
| Calf Raise | 4 | 15–20 |
Day 5: Metabolic Conditioning
Calorie expenditure + conditioning
| Exercise | Sets | Reps |
|---|---|---|
| Barbell Complex (deadlift → row → hang clean → front squat → press) | 4 | 6 reps each |
| Kettlebell Swings | 4 | 20 |
| Box Jumps | 4 | 10 |
| Battle Ropes | 4 | 30 sec |
Progression Protocol
Maintain strength during a cut: keep intensities at 75–85% 1RM on compound lifts regardless of caloric deficit. The stimulus to maintain muscle must remain high even when eating less. Schoenfeld (2010) confirms that heavy resistance training preserves lean mass during deficit better than lighter-weight, higher-rep training.
Calorie deficit target: 300–500 kcal/day below TDEE for ${experience === 'advanced' ? 'advanced lifters' : 'most people'}. Larger deficits (>750 kcal) accelerate muscle loss and performance decline.
Increase cardio before decreasing food. Add 20 min of low-intensity cardio per week before cutting calories further — this preserves diet adherence and training performance.
Deload every 4 weeks: caloric restriction impairs recovery. A planned deload prevents overtraining that would otherwise manifest as injury or performance collapse during a cut.
Common Mistakes at This Level
Crash dieting into contest prep. A 1% bodyweight per week cut rate is the evidence-based maximum for advanced lifters to retain muscle mass. Faster rates compromise lean tissue regardless of training.
Reducing compound lift frequency to add more cardio. Advanced lifters need the neural stimulus of heavy compound work to maintain strength and muscle during a cut. Adding cardio by removing compound sessions is counterproductive.
Using refeeds incorrectly. Refeeds should restore glycogen and leptin levels — not psychological binges. They require controlled carbohydrate overfeeding of 25–30% above maintenance, not ad libitum eating.
Ignoring recovery monitoring. Advanced fat-loss programming demands attention to HRV, readiness, and performance metrics. Subjective feel becomes unreliable under caloric restriction — data matters more.
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 4 days per week: run the 4-day Upper / Lower + Cardio variant. You'll reduce weekly volume per muscle by 20–25% but retain the key frequency stimulus. In practice, a well-designed 4-day program with high effort per session produces 85–90% of the results of a 5-day program.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long should I run this 5-day fat loss 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 5-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?
On training days, keep calories at your target deficit and prioritise protein. Some trainees do better with slightly higher carbs on training days (carb cycling) — this supports performance without eliminating the deficit. On rest days, you can eat at a slightly larger deficit or maintain normal deficit calories with lower carbs.
How long should each session take?
45–65 minutes per session. Push and pull days are typically shorter (45–55 min); leg days run longer (60–70 min) due to the metabolic demand of heavy lower body work.
Should I do cardio on top of this program?
Cardio is already integrated into this program. Add 2–3 sessions of 20–30 minutes of low-intensity steady-state cardio on rest days if your caloric deficit requires it, but avoid high-intensity cardio within 24 hours of heavy strength sessions.
Is it possible to build muscle and lose fat simultaneously on this program?
Body recomposition — simultaneous fat loss and muscle gain — is most achievable for beginners and detrained individuals. For advanced lifters, simultaneous muscle gain and fat loss is essentially impossible. Advanced trainees need to choose: bulk (caloric surplus, muscle gain priority) or cut (caloric deficit, fat loss priority).
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 5-day fat loss plan — heavier when you’re recovered, lighter when you need it.
Download Cora — Free on iOS