Use a free AI workout generator for custom routines

    You're looking for a free AI workout generator? Dorsi just built one. No signup, no credit card, no data leaving your browser. It asks about your schedule, equipment, and training style, then outputs a week of workouts tailored to your goals. I'd start with the strength-focused template if you're after longevity. The generator lives at dorsi.ai/free-ai-workout-generator, try it.

    Most workout planning is just decision fatigue dressed up as discipline. Scroll through a dozen apps, rebuild the same template, second-guess the rep scheme, by the time you start, your motivation's gone. 45% of new gym members quit by January's end, most because planning destroyed their momentum. Dorsi's free AI workout generator kills that friction. Tell it what equipment you have, how much time you've got, and how you're feeling today. It builds a minute-by-minute plan from scratch, no browsing required. The engine adapts mid-set, learning from the last rep you completed. It's the same logic that powers our 20-minute zero-planning workouts. The modules below walk through how the generator handles fatigue levels, progressive overload, and recovery signals, without adding another layer of decision-making.

    Practical Playbook

    1. How to prompt an AI for workouts that don't suck?

      Avoid vague requests like 'give me a workout.' Be specific: your equipment (dumbbells? Bands? Bodyweight?), time (30 min? 45?), and goal (hypertrophy? Endurance?). The AI needs constraints. Without them you'll get random rep schemes that waste your session. I've seen people get '5x12 squats' when they only have 15 minutes. Specify limitations upfront.

    2. Set your true maxes, not your fragile ego

      Most free AI generators ask for your one-rep max or 5RM. If you inflate those, the AI prescribes junk volume, sets you can't actually complete. Input honest numbers. If you don't know your max, use a recent set of 10 hard reps and let the calculator rough estimate. Accuracy matters more than bravado.

    3. Use the generate-iterate loop for progression

      Don't run one AI workout and quit. Generate a session, do it, rate the difficulty at reps 9-10. Feed that back: 'this tricep pushdown was too easy, increase weight 5 lbs.' Over 3-4 iterations the AI dials in. The free tools that lack feedback loops are basically random. The ones that do are worth your time.

    Process at a glance1How to prompt anAI for workoutsthat d…2Set your truemaxes, not yourfragile e…3Use thegenerate-iterateloop for progr…
    Process at a glance
    Key numbers from this article45%new gym members quit
    Key numbers from this article

    Common Mistakes

    • Mistake
      Picking a generator that never asks what equipment you have.
      Why
      You end up with barbell deadlifts in a hotel room or kettlebell swings you can't swing. That's how workouts get skipped.
      Fix
      Choose a generator that filters by your actual gear. Even bodyweight-only is fine, as long as it knows.
    • Mistake
      Using the same generator for weeks without checking if it ramps up difficulty.
      Why
      Most free tools just shuffle exercises from a static list. Your progress stalls because there's no progressive overload built in.
      Fix
      After 2 weeks, look for weight increases, harder variations, or more reps. If nothing changed, move on.
    • Mistake
      Treating every AI-generated workout as gospel, ignoring how your body actually feels.
      Why
      The AI can't see your sleep debt or yesterday's leg day. Following it blindly when you're beat is a fast track to injury.
      Fix
      Rate your readiness beforehand. If the app doesn't let you override, you're better off with something that accepts manual input.
    • Mistake
      Not telling the generator your real goal. Saying 'get fit' gets you a random mess.
      Why
      A hypertrophy program looks very different from endurance. Without a concrete target, the AI has no north star.
      Fix
      Input something specific like 'build muscle in my chest and back' or 'improve my 5k time.' The good generators actually use that.

    From the Dorsi blog

    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.

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