Strength6-DayAdvanced6-Day Powerbuilding

The Best 6-Day Strength Workout Split for Advanced Lifters

Six-day advanced strength is full-time athlete programming. Sessions are short (45–60 min) but frequent — you're at the gym 6 days, twice on Saturday or using AM/PM splits on 3 days. The Sheiko programs and Bulgarian Method variants live here. Volume is periodised in blocks: accumulation (high volume, moderate intensity), intensification (lower volume, high intensity), and realisation (peaking). Not for lifters whose life outside the gym is also stressful — recovery capacity is the limiting factor.

The Weekly Layout

DaySession
Day 1 (Monday)Push A (Chest, Shoulders, Triceps)
Day 2 (Tuesday)Pull A (Back, Biceps)
Day 3 (Wednesday)Legs A (Quad focus)
Day 4 (Thursday)Push B (Shoulder, Chest, Triceps)
Day 5 (Friday)Pull B (Back, Biceps — deadlift)
Day 6 (Saturday)Legs B (Posterior chain focus)
Day 7 (Sunday)Rest

Exact Exercise Selection

Day 1: Push A

Heavy chest + shoulder pressing

ExerciseSetsReps
Barbell Bench Press4–53–5
Overhead Press3–44–6
Incline Dumbbell Press310–12
Dumbbell Lateral Raise415–20
Triceps Pushdown312–15
Overhead Triceps Extension312–15

Day 2: Pull A

Heavy back, bicep

ExerciseSetsReps
Weighted Pull-Up44–6
Barbell Row44–6
Seated Cable Row310–12
Face Pull315–20
Barbell Curl3–48–12
Hammer Curl312

Day 3: Legs A

Quad-dominant + calf

ExerciseSetsReps
Back Squat4–53–5
Leg Press3–410–15
Walking Lunge310 per leg
Leg Extension3–412–15
Calf Raise (seated)415–20

Day 4: Push B

Volume / hypertrophy push

ExerciseSetsReps
Incline Barbell or Dumbbell Press48–12
Dumbbell Shoulder Press3–410–12
Cable Fly412–15
Dumbbell Lateral Raise415–20
Dip (bodyweight or weighted)310–12
Cable Triceps Pushdown315

Day 5: Pull B

Deadlift + volume back, arms

ExerciseSetsReps
Conventional Deadlift4–53–5
Lat Pulldown (wide grip)3–410–12
One-Arm Dumbbell Row310–12
Cable Row312
EZ-Bar Curl3–410–12
Reverse Curl215

Day 6: Legs B

Posterior chain — hamstring, glute dominant

ExerciseSetsReps
Romanian Deadlift48–10
Hip Thrust410–15
Bulgarian Split Squat38–10 per leg
Leg Curl (lying or seated)412–15
Glute Kickback (cable or machine)315 per side
Standing Calf Raise415–20

Progression Protocol

1

Block periodisation (Israetel/Juggernaut): Accumulation block (4 weeks, high volume, 65–75% 1RM) → Intensification block (4 weeks, moderate volume, 80–87.5% 1RM) → Realisation block (2 weeks, low volume, 90–95%+ 1RM) → Deload.

2

RPE-based autoregulation (Tuchscherer/RTS): target top sets at RPE 8 in accumulation, RPE 9 in intensification. If top set comes in at RPE 7, add weight. If RPE 9+, reduce next session.

3

Conjugate variation: rotate max effort exercises every 3–4 weeks to prevent accommodation. Never peak the same lift twice in a row.

4

Annual periodisation: plan 2–3 competition peaks per year if powerlifting, or two 12-week strength blocks with 4-week hypertrophy phases in between.

Common Mistakes at This Level

Running the same template too long. Advanced lifters are highly adapted — the same stimulus stops working faster. Block periodisation with deliberate variation every 4–6 weeks is mandatory.

Neglecting recovery metrics. At this level, overreaching doesn't feel dramatic — it accumulates silently. Tracking HRV, sleep quality, and readiness scores prevents weeks of diminished performance.

Chasing Instagram numbers, not relative strength. An advanced 80 kg lifter with a 200 kg squat is stronger relative to bodyweight than a 100 kg lifter squatting 210 kg. Total load is less relevant than strength-to-weight and lift progression.

Under-eating during accumulation phases. The volume required to drive adaptation at the advanced level demands genuine caloric support. Being lean year-round costs strength.

Avoiding weakness work. Most advanced lifters have a specific weakness (weak off the floor, poor lockout, bad position in the hole) they avoid. Those weaknesses define the ceiling of their progress.

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 need to reduce to 5 days: drop the second legs session or the lighter upper day — whichever contributes least to your primary goal. For strength, keep both heavy compound days and drop a volume accessory day. For hypertrophy, keep the days with highest muscle group coverage and drop the most redundant session. A 5-day program at high effort beats a 6-day program with inconsistent attendance.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long should I run this 6-day strength 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 6-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, prioritise carbohydrates for intra-workout energy: 40–60g complex carbs 90 minutes before training, 30–40g fast carbs (banana, rice cake) within 30 minutes post-training. Protein timing matters less than total daily intake — hit 1.6–2.2 g/kg bodyweight across the day. Rest days can reduce carbohydrate intake by 20–30%, but never reduce protein.

How long should each session take?

40–60 minutes per session — 6-day programs work because sessions are shorter, not longer. If sessions run over 70 minutes on a 6-day schedule, reduce volume to prevent overtraining.

Should I do cardio on top of this program?

Minimal cardio recommended — 2 sessions per week of low-intensity steady-state (20–30 min walk, light cycle) maintains cardiovascular health without compromising strength recovery. Avoid high-intensity cardio; it competes with the same energy systems as heavy lifting.

How do I know when to add weight vs. stick at the same load?

For strength training, the rule is simple: if you completed all prescribed sets and reps at the current weight with good form and had 1–2 reps left in reserve on your last set, add weight next session. If you failed any reps or form broke down, repeat the weight. For intermediate lifters, this progression happens weekly or bi-weekly. For advanced lifters, progression is monthly and requires more sophisticated tools like RPE tracking.

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 6-day strength plan — heavier when you’re recovered, lighter when you need it.

Download Cora — Free on iOS

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