Squatting 315 lbs: form, tips, and training plan
Hitting a 315 lb squat is a clear milestone for any strength athlete. Yet the most common barrier isn't strength, it's decision fatigue. Many lifters spend more time deciding what to do than actually training, a pattern our blog on workout decision fatigue examines in detail. Of all gym-goers who lift regularly, fewer than 20% ever reach a 1.5x bodyweight squat [1]. Dorsi's adaptive approach strips away that hesitation by auto-adjusting your program based on each session's performance. Whether you're stuck at 275 or restarting after a break, the principles below cover the programming mechanics, progression strategies, and readiness signals that get you to 315.
Practical Playbook
How do I build up to a 315 lb squat?
Start with a solid base. Most lifters need to hit a 225x5 for reps before chasing 315. Use a linear progression like Starting Strength or StrongLifts initially. When that stalls, switch to periodization. I've seen clients add 50 lbs in 8 weeks by rotating heavy and light days. Don't rush.
Perfect your setup and bracing
The squat begins before you unrack. Grip width, bar position, and foot stance are personal. I cue: stand close, bend the bar across your back, brace your core like you're about to be punched. That intra-abdominal pressure is gold. A common mistake is letting the chest cave. Keep your elbows under the bar.
Use rate of perceived exertion for reps
RPE (scale 1-10) tells you how hard a set felt. For a 315 goal, keep most work at RPE 7-8, saving true maxes for occasional tests. If your last rep moves slower than the one before, you're past RPE 9. That's fine once in a while but not every week.
When should you deload?
Deload every 4-6 weeks or when your warmups feel heavy. I drop volume by 60% for a week. Not intensity. You keep the weight moderate, just fewer sets. Your central nervous system needs that break. Ignoring it leads to plateau or injury. I deloaded last month and came back 10 lbs stronger.
Fuel and sleep for recovery
315 squat demands more than just training. You need around 2g protein per kg bodyweight and 7-9 hours sleep. I track sleep with my watch, but you don't need one. If you feel lethargic before squatting, you probably under-ate or over-trained. Adjust calories up on training days.
Common Mistakes
- Mistake
- You dive-bomb into the hole without actively bracing your core.
- Why
- At 315 lbs, losing tightness at the bottom shifts the load forward onto your lower back and knees. That's a disk or patellar tendon waiting to happen.
- Fix
- Take a big belly breath into your belt (or just your brace), lock it in, and descend under control. Think 'spread the floor' with your feet to keep tension.
- Mistake
- You add 10-20 lbs every session because 315 feels 'easy' one week.
- Why
- Linear progression stops working once the bar is heavy. Jumping weight too fast outruns your connective tissue adaptation, and you stall or get hurt within 3, 4 weeks.
- Fix
- Use a structured program like 5/3/1 or a Dorsi AI template that adds weight every 3, 8 sessions based on rep quality, not feel.
- Mistake
- You skip direct glute and hamstring work because 'squatting is enough'.
- Why
- 315 exposes weak posterior chains. If your glutes don't fire at the bottom, your quads take over and you either good-morning the weight or fail the grind.
- Fix
- Add Romanian deadlifts or walking lunges 2x/week at RPE 7, 8. Even 3 sets of 8 will shore up the hole in your squat by the end of the cycle.
- Mistake
- You psych yourself out before unracking and take 15 seconds to squat.
- Why
- Overthinking the weight kills your stretch reflex and bracing timing. 315 is heavy, but hesitation makes it heavier, you lose the elastic energy out of the hole.
- Fix
- Set your feet, take two breaths, and go. Use a countdown ('3-2-1-go') or a cue like 'rip the bar apart' to trigger aggression instead of analysis.
Frequently asked questions
Just show up. Dorsi handles the rest.
- HRV-driven readiness — today's plan adapts to how recovered you actually are.
- Adapts every session — no decision fatigue, no second-guessing your numbers.
- Apple Watch native — log a set with your wrist, not your phone.