Recovery: Deload Volume Targets
Deload volume cuts of 40-60% over 5-7 days preserve 95-100% of strength when intensity stays above 80% 1RM. Issurin 2010 and Murach & Bagley 2015 (PMID 26284291) establish phase-specific volume targets.
| Measure | Value | Unit | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Volume Cut — Hypertrophy Phase | 40–50 | % reduction in weekly sets | High set volumes during hypertrophy phases make 40-50% cuts still leave meaningful stimulus |
| Volume Cut — Strength Phase | 30–40 | % reduction in weekly sets | Strength phases use fewer sets; smaller percentage cut protects neuromuscular specificity |
| Intensity Target During Deload | 80–90 | % of 1RM | Maintaining load above 80% preserves strength; dropping below 70% risks detraining in trained athletes |
| Deload Duration — Standard | 5–7 | days | One week is the most validated deload duration across training populations; Issurin 2010 |
| Return Protocol — Volume Increase Week 1 Post-Deload | 90 | % of pre-deload volume | Return to 90% of prior weekly sets in week 1 post-deload to capture supercompensation without re-accumulating fatigue |
| Volume Cut — Peaking Phase | 50–60 | % reduction | Peaking phases use maximal taper; volume drops aggressively while intensity climbs to 90-100% 1RM |
A deload without specific volume targets is guesswork. The tables below provide phase-specific and athlete-level cut targets based on current periodization evidence.
Primary Table — Volume Targets by Training Phase
| Training Phase | Volume Cut % | Intensity Target | Duration (days) | Return Protocol |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypertrophy (high volume) | 40–50% | 80–85% 1RM | 7 | Return to 90% week 1, 100% week 2 |
| Strength (moderate volume) | 30–40% | 85–90% 1RM | 5–7 | Return to 90% week 1, 105% week 2 |
| Peaking / Competition Taper | 50–60% | 90–100% 1RM | 5–10 | Competition; no return ramp needed |
| Accumulation Block (GPP) | 35–45% | 75–85% 1RM | 7 | Return to 85% week 1, 100% week 2 |
| In-Season Maintenance | 20–30% | 80–90% 1RM | 4–5 | Return to full within 5 days |
Maintaining intensity above 80% 1RM is the critical non-negotiable during most deload types. Strength is velocity-sensitive and load-sensitive; neuromuscular adaptations begin to attenuate when load drops below 70% 1RM for more than 7-10 days in trained athletes (Murach & Bagley, 2015 — PMID 26284291). Volume, by contrast, can be cut aggressively without proportional losses in strength performance.
Secondary Table — Volume Targets by Athlete Level
| Athlete Type | Sets/Week During Deload | Frequency During Deload | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Novice (< 1 year training) | 6–8 sets per muscle group | 2x/week | Lower pre-deload volume means smaller absolute cut |
| Intermediate (1–3 years) | 8–12 sets per muscle group | 3x/week | Standard volume deload; most evidence applies here |
| Advanced (3–5+ years) | 10–14 sets per muscle group | 3–4x/week | High baseline volume requires larger absolute set reduction |
| Elite / Competitive | 12–16 sets per muscle group | 4x/week | Phase-specific; may vary widely by sport and position |
Issurin (2010) identifies the deload as the critical link in block periodization — the period during which accumulated fatigue dissipates and supercompensation emerges. Without sufficient volume reduction, residual fatigue masks fitness gains; without sufficient intensity maintenance, the neuromuscular stimulus that produced those gains is lost before they can be expressed (Issurin, 2010 — PMID 20092368).
How to use this data: Identify your current training phase from the primary table. Note your baseline weekly sets per muscle group. Apply the volume cut percentage to get your deload target sets. Check the intensity target and confirm you are not dropping load below that threshold. Set your return protocol before beginning the deload so you have a clear re-escalation plan.
Related Pages
Sources
- Murach & Bagley 2015 — Distinction Between Low-Load and High-Load Resistance Exercise
- Issurin 2010 — New Horizons for the Methodology and Physiology of Training Periodization
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I ever reduce both volume and intensity during a deload?
Only during peaking tapers immediately before competition, where both are manipulated intentionally. For standard recovery deloads, maintain intensity at 80-90% 1RM and cut only volume. Dropping both creates a detraining stimulus rather than a recovery one.
How do I calculate my deload volume from weekly sets?
Count your total working sets per muscle group per week in the final loading week. Apply the appropriate cut percentage for your phase: 40-50% for hypertrophy, 30-40% for strength, 50-60% for peaking. Round to whole sets, always rounding down.
Do frequency and session count change during a deload?
Frequency can stay the same or drop by one session per week. Maintaining session frequency while cutting volume per session is often preferred as it preserves training habits and movement patterns. Dropping session count by one is acceptable for full-week deloads.
When should I return to full volume after a deload?
Start week 1 post-deload at approximately 90% of pre-deload volume, then return to 100% or slightly above in week 2. This stepped return captures the supercompensation window without immediately re-accumulating the fatigue that triggered the deload.