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Sets Per Muscle Per Week Calculator

Find your optimal weekly training volume per muscle group: your MEV, MAV, and MRV landmarks, adjusted for your experience level.

How many sets does this muscle need?

How many sets per muscle group per week?

For muscle growth, most lifters do well on roughly 10 to 20 hard sets per muscle per week. Beginners build muscle on the lower end (8 to 12 sets), and advanced lifters usually need more (16 to 22+) to keep progressing. Growth can continue past 20 sets for some people, but with diminishing returns and rising fatigue cost. The practical approach is to start near your minimum effective volume and add a set or two per muscle each week until progress or recovery tells you to hold.

How this calculator works

The framework comes from the volume landmarks popularized by Dr. Mike Israetel and Renaissance Periodization: every muscle has three weekly set landmarks (MEV, MAV, MRV), and where you should sit between them depends on your training age. The underlying idea, that weekly set volume drives hypertrophy up to a recoverable ceiling, is supported by the dose-response research (Schoenfeld 2017; Baz-Valle 2022).

MuscleMEV (sets/wk)MAV (sets/wk)MRV (sets/wk)
Chest812-2022
Back1014-2225
Shoulders (side delts)616-2226
Biceps814-2022
Triceps610-1618
Quads812-1820
Hamstrings610-1618
Glutes48-1418
Calves812-1620
Abs0*16-2025
Traps0*12-1620
Forearms28-1216

*Abs and traps get heavy indirect work from compound lifts, so their minimum effective volume for direct sets can be near zero. Add direct sets only if you want to grow them faster. Forearm landmarks are the least established in the literature; treat them as a rough guide.

Beginners build muscle near MEV and should not chase high volume. Advanced lifters need more total volume to keep progressing and can push the upper MAV range toward MRV during a hard block, then deload.

MEV, MAV, MRV: the three numbers that matter

  • MEV (Minimum Effective Volume). The fewest hard sets per week that still build the muscle. Start a block here so you have room to add volume later.
  • MAV (Maximum Adaptive Volume). The productive range where most growth happens for most people. This is the goldilocks zone you want to live in.
  • MRV (Maximum Recoverable Volume). The ceiling you can still recover from. Past this, extra sets stop adding stimulus and just pile on fatigue.

The winning strategy is simple: start near MEV, add a set or two per muscle each week as you adapt, ride the MAV range where progress is fastest, and deload before you blow past MRV. The hard part is not the theory. It is counting your hard sets per muscle accurately every week, especially across compound lifts that hit several muscles at once.

How to split your weekly sets across sessions

Total weekly volume matters most, but how you spread it matters too. Per-session quality drops after roughly 6 to 10 hard sets for a single muscle: later sets are more fatigued and stimulate less growth. So a muscle that needs 16 sets a week grows better as two sessions of 8 than one brutal session of 16.

A practical default for most lifters is to train each muscle about twice per week. Higher-volume muscles (back, side delts) can benefit from three touches; low-volume muscles can sit at one to two. The calculator above suggests a session count based on your target range.

When to deload

A deload is a planned easy week that lets accumulated fatigue clear so the next block starts fresh. As you add sets each week and approach your MRV, performance stalls, joints ache, and motivation dips. That is the signal. Most lifters deload every 4 to 8 weeks, either by cutting volume roughly in half or by keeping the same sets at lighter loads. Then you reset near MEV and climb again. Riding MAV most of the time and deloading on schedule is how you keep progressing for years instead of stalling in months.

Worked example: intermediate chest

An intermediate lifter wants to grow their chest. From the table, chest is MEV 8, MAV 12-20, MRV 22. Here is a sane block:

  • Week 1: start at 12 hard sets (low MAV), split as 2 sessions of 6.
  • Weeks 2-4: add 2 sets per week (14, 16, 18) as long as you are recovering and progressing.
  • Week 5: push to 20 sets if performance is still climbing. You are now near MRV (22).
  • Week 6: deload to ~8 sets, lighter loads, then start the next block back near 12.

That is the whole game for every muscle: pick your range from your experience level, start low, climb, deload, repeat.

Track your sets per muscle automatically with PRPath

Counting weekly sets by hand is where almost everyone gives up, especially once compound lifts split credit across muscles. PRPath does the math for you:

  • Muscle Balance Score. A radar chart on the Progress tab color-codes your weekly volume for every muscle, so imbalances are obvious at a glance.
  • Goldilocks Zone. PRPath flags each muscle as under-volumed, in the ideal range, or over-volumed across rolling 7, 14, and 28-day windows, so you always know who needs more or fewer sets.
  • Compound set crediting. A bench press counts toward chest, front delts, and triceps automatically: primary movers get full credit and secondary movers get partial credit, so your volume math is actually correct.
  • Atlas AI coach (Pro). Ask "is my back volume high enough this week?" and Atlas reads your log and answers.

Download PRPath Free

Frequently Asked Questions

How many sets per muscle group per week should I do?
Most lifters grow well on roughly 10-20 hard sets per muscle per week, with growth continuing past that for many at diminishing returns. Beginners progress on the lower end (8-12), advanced lifters often need 16-22+. Start near your MEV and add sets over a block toward your MRV.
What do MEV, MAV, and MRV mean?
Volume landmarks from Dr. Mike Israetel and Renaissance Periodization. MEV is the minimum that still builds muscle, MAV is the productive sweet spot, MRV is the most you can recover from. Live mostly in the MAV range.
Is more sets always better?
Up to a point. Volume helps until your MRV. Past that, extra sets stop adding stimulus while piling on fatigue, which can stall progress.
How many times per week should I train each muscle?
Spreading weekly volume across two or more sessions beats one giant session, because per-session quality drops after about 6-10 hard sets for a muscle. Training each muscle roughly twice per week is a solid default.
Do warm-up sets count?
No. Only count hard working sets within a few reps of failure. Warm-ups and light back-off sets do not count toward weekly volume.
How do I count sets for compound lifts?
Compounds hit several muscles, so a set should be credited to each muscle it trains: fully to the primary movers and partially to the secondary ones. PRPath does this automatically, which is far more accurate than counting a bench press as one "chest" set.

Related tools and guides

Sources: Schoenfeld BJ, Ogborn D, Krieger JW. Dose-response relationship between weekly resistance training volume and increases in muscle mass. J Sports Sci, 2017. · Baz-Valle E, et al. A systematic review of the effects of different resistance training volumes on muscle hypertrophy. J Hum Kinet, 2022. · Volume landmark framework (MEV/MAV/MRV): Israetel M, Renaissance Periodization.

Stop counting sets by hand.

PRPath tracks your weekly volume per muscle automatically and tells you exactly who needs more sets and who needs a deload.

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