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Mike Israetel 5 Week Hypertrophy Workout Spreadsheet (2020) - Lift Vault PDF

This document summarizes Mike Israetel's 5 week hypertrophy workout spreadsheet and the concepts of training volume landmarks. The spreadsheet provides a 6 day per week workout over 4 weeks with a deload on week 5 based on Israetel's recommendations. It discusses maintenance volume, minimum effective volume, and maximum adaptive volume, which are training volume levels for optimal muscle growth. The document also provides methods for finding an individual's specific volume landmarks through experimentation and monitoring performance changes over multiple training cycles.

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Nandagopal K
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78% found this document useful (9 votes)
7K views4 pages

Mike Israetel 5 Week Hypertrophy Workout Spreadsheet (2020) - Lift Vault PDF

This document summarizes Mike Israetel's 5 week hypertrophy workout spreadsheet and the concepts of training volume landmarks. The spreadsheet provides a 6 day per week workout over 4 weeks with a deload on week 5 based on Israetel's recommendations. It discusses maintenance volume, minimum effective volume, and maximum adaptive volume, which are training volume levels for optimal muscle growth. The document also provides methods for finding an individual's specific volume landmarks through experimentation and monitoring performance changes over multiple training cycles.

Uploaded by

Nandagopal K
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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02/11/2020 Mike Israetel 5 Week Hypertrophy Workout Spreadsheet (2020) | Lift Vault

Mike Israetel 5 Week


Hypertrophy Workout Routine
Spreadsheet
LAST UPDATED APRIL 18, 2020 
EXPERIENCE LEVEL: ADVANCED, INTERMEDIATE 
WEEKS: 5 
PERIODIZATION: LINEAR PERIODIZATION, UNDULATING PERIODIZATION 
PROGRAM GOAL: HYPERTROPHY 

AS AN AFFILIATE OF VARIOUS SITES, INCLUDING AMAZON ASSOCIATES, I MAY EARN A COMMISSION ON QUALIFYING PURCHASES VIA
LINKS IN THIS POST AT NO EXTRA COST TO YOU. SEE FULL DISCLOSURE

Note: The below spreadsheet is based on the 2019 version of Mike Israetel’s articles on muscle group
hypertrophy. As of March 2020, he is in the midst of updating these articles with new guidelines. These
guidelines have not yet been taken into account in the spreadsheet, but an updated spreadsheet is in the
works. For the latest thinking from Mike Israetel, please read the articles linked in this post. A second update
will be posted here when the spreadsheet is updated.

Dr. Mike Israetel published a very popular article entitled Training Volume Landmarks for Rennaisance
Periodization.

A summary of the article is below, though reading the article in its entirety is recommended.

Contents [hide]

1 5 Week Hypertrophy Workout Routine Spreadsheet


1.1 Using the Spreadsheet
2 Understanding Hypertrophy Training Volume
3 How to Find Your Individual Optimal Training Volumes for Hypertrophy
3.1 How to Find Your Maintenance Volume
3.2 How to Find Your Minimum Effective Volume
3.3 How to Find Your Maximum Adaptive Volume
3.4 Related Posts

5 Week Hypertrophy Workout Routine Spreadsheet


A terrific Lift Vault reader submitted this spreadsheet to help provide more structure to the recommendations
made by Mike Israetel in the article. It makes it much easier to use the workout based on your own current
strength levels.

This is a 6 day hypertrophy workout routine that runs for a 4 week mesocycle and includes a deload on week
5.

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Using the Spreadsheet


1. There are some extremely important concepts about hypertrophy explained below. Please read them –
or better yet, read Mike Israetel’s article in its entirety.
2. Adjust your starting weights – use the calculator on the “Week 1” sheet if needed. Be conservative –
there is lots of time to add weight and remember this is a hypertrophy program.
3. The exercises are pulled from the various muscle group articles on Renaissance Periodization.
4. The number of sets done each week is tracked on the “Sets per Week Summary” tab.
5. Pro Tip: It’d probably be a good idea to track RPE or RIR for each exercise so you can look back on
the mesocycle and see if the number of sets used was effective or not.

The hypertrophy spreadsheet is based on the principles discussed in the article, though the spreadsheet is in
no way affiliated with Mike Israetel. It was constructed based on an interpretation of his training volume
landmarks article. If you want real training advice directly from Renaissance Periodization, please see
their coaching options.

 Dr. Mike Israetel Training Volume Landmarks Hypertrophy Routine | LiftVault.com

Understanding Hypertrophy Training Volume


In Dr. Israetel’s article, he discussed the following training volume topics:

maintenance volume (MV)


Maintenance volume is the number of sets needed to maintain your current muscular size.
minimum effective volume (MEV)
Minimum effective volume is the lowest number of sets needed to increase your muscular size.
maximum adaptive volume (MAV)
Maximum adaptive volume is the volume range where the most muscular growth occurs.
maximum recoverable volume (MRV)
Maximum recoverable volume is the upper limit of training volume that the body can still recover
from (i.e. repair and grow muscle mass).
Regular training in the MRV range will result in excessive accumulated fatigue and will not induce
hypertrophy. Limited training near an athlete’s MRV prior to a deload can be effective for achieving
super-compensation.

This allowed for a much more finely tuned hypertrophy-based workout depending on the muscle groups the
athlete wanted to develop. It also allows for individual differences to be recognized, as different athletes will
have different MV, MEV, MAV, and MRV.

It is important for a lifter to begin to identify these variables in for themself through training. If these variables
are not currently understood, they can be learned through experimentation and observation.

How to Find Your Individual Optimal Training Volumes for


Hypertrophy
Below are summaries of how to find different volume training landmarks for yourself. A full explanation is
available in Dr. Israetel’s article.

Many of the below volumes reference “rep strength” or “performance.” Here is how this can be measured.
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Performance or rep strength can be measured using RPE or reps in reserve. If during Week 1 of training you
did 4 sets of 12 reps of bicep curls with 15 lb dumbbells and felt you had 2 reps in reserve at the end of your
4th set and then you repeated this weight*rep*set scheme at the end of a mesocycle and felt like you had 5
reps in reserve after the final set of curls – congratulations, you increased performance.

Similarly, if the last set during week 1 was RPE 8 and that same weight*rpe*set scheme was an RPE 6 on the
test week after a mesocycle, performance was increased.

How to Find Your Maintenance Volume


Two to three times per year should be spent doing maintenance training and eating to resensitize your
body to stimulus and growth.
Start by following the “MV” volume recommendations laid out in the article (also available on the “Sets
per Week Summary” tab in the spreadsheet below).
If your rep strength has been conserved at the end of one mesocycle at the prescribed volume, then
the volume was adequate.
Next mesocycle: try reducing the number of sets to see if your MV is even lower.
If your rep strength declined, volume was too low and your MV is higher than the volume of work down
in the previous mesocycle.
Next mesocycle: increase the number of sets and see if rep strength can be conserved.
General trip: be conservative. Your MV is probably lower than you think.

How to Find Your Minimum Effective Volume


Mike outlines two methods for calculating your minimum effective volume.

Method 1: Start with recommended MEV (again, these are noted in the article as well as in the
spreadsheet below on the “Sets per Week Summary” tab) and run for one mesocycle. Increase
weights each week, but do not increase the number of sets. Test your performance on core exercises
for each muscle group at the end of the mesocycle.
If it improved, the volume of the last mesocycle was at or above your MEV. Try lowering volume
by 2 sets each week and see if progress can continue to be made. Do this until you discover a
volume that does not increase your performance. Add 2 sets to the volume that did not increase
your performance and this is your approximate MEV.
If your strength on a core exercise for a muscle group did not improve, the volume was below
your MEV. Try adding 2 sets per week until performance improves.

Method 2: To approximate whether a particular training session was within your MEV, ask the following
questions.
Did the training session provide a pump?
No pump = 0 points
Some pump = 1 point
Great pump = 2 points
Did the training session challenge the target muscles?
No = 0 points
Lots of tensions and fatigue = 1 point
Muscles felt stressed and exhausted near their limit = 2 points
Did the training session make you sore?
No = 0 points
Stiff for a few hours after or a little sore the next day = 1 point
Sore for multiple days = 2 points
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A score between 2 and 4 is likely to be within your MEV.


If you’re training a muscle group 2x per week, expect more 4’s.
If you’re training a muscle group 3-4x per week, expect more 3’s.
If you’re training a muscle group 5-6x per week, expect more 2’s or even 1’s.

How to Find Your Maximum Adaptive Volume


Finding MAV is done by continually adding sets until soreness becomes excessive and peformance begins to
degrade. Here is how to quantify excessive soreness and degrading performance.

Soreness at the end of a session


No soreness = 1 point
A little stiff or sore afterward, but not sore at all by the time the next session for that muscle group
occurred = 2 points
Definitely getting DOMS (delayed onset muscle soreness), but it went away just in time for that
muscle group’s next session = 3 points
You got DOMS and were still feeling them during the next session = 4 points
Performance during a session (this is modified from the article in an attempt to make it more usable)
You had had 2+ reps in reserve, RPE 7 or lower = 1 point
You had 1 rep in reserve, RPE 8 = 2 points
You just barely got all the reps, RPE 9/9.5 = 3 points
You missed reps or had performance degrade from last week (accounting for different weights,
etc.) = 4 points
How many sets to add based on points
1 + 1 = add 2 or 3 sets to that exercise
Any 2’s = add 1 set to that exercise
Any 3’s = do not add any sets to that exercise
Any 4’s = consider taking a light session, half week, or full deload

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