<!-- Machine-readable version of https://dorsi.ai/topics/upper-lower-split. noindex. -->
# Upper lower split: routine, exercises, and weekly schedule

> Updated: 2026-07-09 · Source: https://dorsi.ai/topics/upper-lower-split

The upper/lower split is a staple of strength-training programming, dividing workouts into upper-body and lower-body days for balanced recovery and…

An upper/lower split divides your training into upper-body days and lower-body days. I run one four days a week: Monday upper, Tuesday lower, rest, Thursday upper, Friday lower. That gives me two full cycles through every muscle group. For anyone who can schedule four sessions a week, I think it's the most efficient way to grow strength without the fatigue of a full-body program. The rest of this page lays out the exact template, rep schemes, and how to progress.

The upper/lower split is a staple of strength-training programming, dividing workouts into upper-body and lower-body days for balanced recovery and progressive overload. While direct research on this specific split is limited, insights from adjacent fields underscore its rationale. For example, post-stroke gait rehabilitation relies on targeted lower-limb motor learning guided by visual feedback [1], echoing the need for focused lower-body sessions. Similarly, intraoperative nerve injuries during shoulder procedures, such as those affecting the brachial plexus, highlight the vulnerability of upper-body musculature during complex movements [2], reinforcing the value of dedicated upper-body strength work. These findings suggest that separating upper and lower training may optimize neuromuscular adaptation, though controlled studies on the upper/lower split itself remain scarce.

## Pick your upper lower frequency
If you train four days a week, two upper and two lower sessions is the sweet spot. Five days? Add an extra upper or a weak-point day. Upper days hit chest, back, shoulders, arms. Lower days hit quads, hamstrings, glutes, calves. The split works because each major pattern gets hit twice a week with proper recovery in between.

## How many exercises per session?
Stick to 3, 5 compound lifts per day. On upper day, pair a vertical press with a horizontal press, then a vertical pull and a horizontal pull. On lower day, start with a squat variant, then a hinge, then a single-leg movement, and finish with calves. That's enough to drive progress without wrecking you.

## Program progressive overload systematically
Add weight, reps, or sets each week. If you benched 185x8 last upper, go for 185x9 or 190x8 this week. Track everything. If you stall two weeks in a row, deload. Rotate which lift you push hardest, don't try to PR on every exercise every session. Steady beats heroic.

## When should you deload?
After four to six weeks of consistent training, take a deload week. Drop volume by 40, 60% or intensity by 10, 15%. Your CNS needs the break. I do the same movements but lighter and fewer sets. You come back stronger. Ignore the bros who say never deload; they're either on gear or injured.

## FAQ

### What is a good upper-lower split?
A good upper-lower split hits each major push and pull pattern twice a week. Four days works best: Monday upper, Tuesday lower, Thursday upper, Friday lower. You get frequency without junk volume. My preference: start upper with a vertical press and a horizontal pull, then rotate. Keep sessions under an hour, beyond that and you're just accumulating fatigue.

### Is upper-lower split more effective?
More effective than what? Compared to a bro split, absolutely, two stimuli per muscle group per week beats one. Versus full body three times a week, it's a wash for most lifters. The real win: it's easier to recover from, so you can push intensity harder each session. I'd pick upper-lower over PPL for anyone who wants strength and size without living in the gym.

### What is the upper-lower split called?
It's just called an upper-lower split. No fancy name, that's the point. Sometimes lifters call it a 4-day upper-lower or UL split. In program design circles it's a non-competing split because you're not overlapping the same movements back to back. But really, it's the most straightforward way to organize training. No acronyms needed.

### Is a 4 day upper-lower split good?
It's my default for anyone lifting seriously. Four days gives you two upper and two lower sessions, each with enough volume for progress but short enough to stay fresh. The catch: you need at least one rest day between the first pair and the second. If you can't commit to four consistent days, a 3-day full body might serve you better. Otherwise, it's hard to beat.
