- Why training on a SARMs cycle demands a fundamentally different approach than natural training
- How enhanced recovery changes your optimal volume, frequency, and rest periods
- The exact rep ranges and intensity zones that maximize muscle protein synthesis on cycle
- A week-by-week progression model for 8-week and 12-week SARMs cycles
- How training structure should change depending on which SARMs or steroids you are running
- The biggest training mistakes enhanced athletes make that leave gains on the table
- How to use deloads, intra-cycle peaking, and post-cycle training to protect your gains
- A ready-to-use 4-day and 5-day training template for enhanced lifters
Training on a SARMs cycle without adjusting your programming is one of the most common mistakes enhanced athletes make. The compounds are working harder than your training plan, and you end up leaving a significant portion of your potential gains on the table. Whether you are running RAD-140, LGD-4033, or a full testosterone base, the hormonal environment in your body during a cycle demands higher volume, increased frequency, and smarter intensity management than a natural lifter should ever attempt. This guide gives you the exact framework to match your training to your enhancement.
Training on a SARMs cycle should involve 20โ30% more weekly volume than your natural baseline, with training frequency of 4โ6 sessions per week due to accelerated muscle protein synthesis and recovery. Rep ranges of 6โ15 work best, compound movements should be prioritized, and weekly progressive overload is essential since your body can handle and respond to more stress than it can during a natural training block.
[IMAGE SUGGESTION 1: A split-panel training volume chart comparing natural lifter weekly sets vs enhanced athlete weekly sets by muscle group, color-coded by SARMs type.]
1. Why Training on a SARMs Cycle Is Fundamentally Different
Your body’s capacity to build muscle is gated by two things: the anabolic signal and the recovery capacity. Natural lifters are constantly managing the tension between these two. Push too hard and recovery fails. Pull back too much and the anabolic stimulus is insufficient.
When you are running SARMs or anabolic steroids, both sides of that equation shift dramatically. Muscle protein synthesis (MPS) is elevated, androgen receptor upregulation increases the cell’s sensitivity to training stimuli, and nitrogen retention stays positive for longer. Meanwhile, connective tissue repair, glycogen replenishment, and central nervous system (CNS) recovery all speed up, though not to the same degree as muscular recovery.
The practical result: your muscles are ready for the next session before your tendons and joints are. This is why programming on a cycle is not simply “do more.” It is about intelligently distributing higher volume across more frequent sessions while managing the connective tissue load that SARMs do not directly accelerate.
A 2020 study published in The Journal of Physiology demonstrated that supraphysiological androgen exposure increases the rate of myofibrillar protein synthesis by 40โ60% above natural baseline. This means enhanced athletes have a wider anabolic window each day, but only capture those gains if the training stimulus is sufficient to match. Insufficient volume on cycle leads to uncaptured growth potential.
The specific compounds you are running matter too. Bulking SARMs like RAD-140 and LGD-4033 support more total volume than cutting SARMs like Ostarine or Cardarine, because the anabolic drive is stronger. A RAD-140 cycle at 15mg can support 20โ25 working sets per muscle group per week. Ostarine at 20mg might support 15โ18 sets before recovery becomes limiting.
2. Volume: How Many Sets Per Muscle Group on Cycle
Volume is the primary driver of hypertrophy, and on a SARMs or steroid cycle, your maximum adaptive volume (MAV) ceiling rises substantially. Here is how to think about volume on cycle versus natural training:
| Muscle Group | Natural (Intermediate) | SARMs Cycle (Moderate: Ostarine/LGD) | SARMs Cycle (Aggressive: RAD-140/YK-11) | Steroid Cycle (Testosterone Base) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chest | 10โ14 sets/week | 14โ18 sets/week | 18โ22 sets/week | 20โ25 sets/week |
| Back | 12โ16 sets/week | 16โ20 sets/week | 20โ24 sets/week | 22โ28 sets/week |
| Shoulders | 10โ14 sets/week | 14โ18 sets/week | 16โ20 sets/week | 18โ22 sets/week |
| Legs (Quads/Hams) | 12โ16 sets/week | 16โ20 sets/week | 20โ26 sets/week | 22โ28 sets/week |
| Arms (Bis/Tris) | 8โ12 sets/week | 12โ16 sets/week | 14โ18 sets/week | 16โ20 sets/week |
Do not jump straight to maximum volume on week 1 of your cycle. Start at your natural maintenance volume and add 2โ3 sets per muscle group per week for the first 3โ4 weeks as the compound builds in your system. This prevents joint overload early when the anabolic environment is not yet fully established.
3. Training Frequency: How Often to Train Each Muscle Group
Frequency is where enhanced athletes gain the most leverage over natural lifters. Muscle protein synthesis peaks roughly 24โ36 hours after a training session in natural athletes and can take 48โ72 hours to return to baseline. On a SARMs cycle, MPS elevation stays elevated longer and restores faster, meaning you can productively train a muscle group 2โ3 times per week instead of the conventional once or twice.
- Beginner to intermediate enhanced (first or second cycle): 4 training days per week, each muscle group trained 2x weekly.
- Intermediate to advanced enhanced (third cycle and beyond): 5โ6 training days per week, each muscle group hit 2โ3x weekly.
- Aggressive cycles (RAD-140, YK-11, testosterone): Push toward 3x frequency for lagging muscle groups while keeping 2x for everything else.
A meta-analysis by Schoenfeld et al. (2016) in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research found that training each muscle group 2x per week produced significantly greater hypertrophy than 1x per week frequency when volume was equated. On a SARMs cycle, the enhanced recovery capacity makes 3x weekly frequency viable for most muscle groups, a frequency that is generally too demanding for natural athletes to sustain.
4. Rep Ranges and Intensity: Where Enhanced Gains Happen
| Rep Range | Load (% 1RM) | Primary Stimulus | Best For | Enhanced Athlete Priority |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1โ5 reps | 85โ100% | Neural strength, myofibrillar density | Powerlifting strength, CNS efficiency | Low to moderate (joint stress is high) |
| 6โ10 reps | 70โ85% | Myofibrillar hypertrophy + strength | Compound movements, primary builders | High (primary zone for most enhanced athletes) |
| 10โ15 reps | 60โ70% | Sarcoplasmic hypertrophy, metabolic stress | Isolation work, high-volume blocks | High (excellent for enhanced volume blocks) |
| 15โ30 reps | 40โ60% | Metabolic stress, blood flow/pump | Finisher sets, injury-prone joints | Moderate (use for arms, calves, isolation) |
Structure your primary compound sets in the 6โ10 range, then add 2โ3 accessory exercises per muscle in the 10โ15 rep range. Finish with a high-rep pump set at 15โ20 reps for blood flow and metabolic stress. This three-tier approach maximizes the full spectrum of hypertrophic stimuli your enhanced recovery can handle.
5. Progressive Overload Strategy: Moving the Bar Forward Each Week
Progressive overload on a SARMs cycle works faster than in natural training, and your programming needs to account for this. Natural lifters might add 2.5โ5 lbs to a compound lift every 2โ4 weeks. On a solid RAD-140 or LGD-4033 cycle, you may add 5โ10 lbs to your bench, squat, or row every single week for the first 4โ6 weeks.
Weeks 1โ3 (Loading Phase): Focus on technical consistency and modest weekly jumps (5 lbs per compound lift). The compound is building in your system and joints are adapting.
Weeks 4โ7 (Peak Phase): Hit maximum loading. Compound lift jumps of 5โ10 lbs per week are sustainable. Push intensity to RPE 8โ9 on working sets. This is where the bulk of your strength and size gains come.
Week 8 / Final Week (Consolidation): Match or slightly exceed your peak week weights but reduce total sets by 20%. Consolidate gains and reduce CNS fatigue before PCT or the inter-cycle break.
[IMAGE SUGGESTION 2: A periodization wave chart showing a typical 8-week SARMs cycle training block with volume and intensity plotted week by week.]
6. Training Structure by SARMs Compound
| Compound | Anabolic Strength | Recommended Weekly Volume | Best Training Split | Rep Range Focus |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ostarine (MK-2866) 20โ25mg | Mild | 15โ18 sets/muscle/week | 4-day Upper/Lower | 10โ15 reps (muscle preservation) |
| LGD-4033 (Ligandrol) 5โ10mg | Moderate | 18โ22 sets/muscle/week | PPL x2 / 6-day | 8โ12 reps |
| RAD-140 (Testolone) 10โ20mg | High | 20โ25 sets/muscle/week | PPL x2 or Bro Split | 6โ12 reps |
| YK-11 5โ10mg | Very High | 22โ28 sets/muscle/week | High Frequency PPL x2 | 6โ10 reps (myostatin inhibition) |
| ACP-105 10โ15mg | Moderate | 16โ20 sets/muscle/week | 4-day Upper/Lower | 8โ15 reps |
| Testosterone (200โ500mg/week) | Very High | 22โ30 sets/muscle/week | PPL x2 or 5-day split | 6โ12 reps, heavy compounds |
7. The 4-Day Enhanced Training Template (Intermediate)
This template works for cycles using moderate SARMs like LGD-4033, RAD-140 at standard doses, or a planned SARMs stack. Rest days are Monday, Wednesday, Saturday.
Tuesday: Upper A (Chest/Shoulders/Triceps)
| Exercise | Sets | Reps | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Barbell Bench Press | 4 | 6โ8 | Primary compound, RPE 8 |
| Incline Dumbbell Press | 3 | 8โ10 | Upper chest priority |
| Cable Fly | 3 | 12โ15 | Stretch-focused |
| Overhead Press | 4 | 6โ10 | Seated or standing |
| Lateral Raise | 4 | 15โ20 | 2 working + 2 drop sets |
| Tricep Pressdown | 3 | 12โ15 | Cable or rope |
| Overhead Tricep Extension | 3 | 10โ12 | Long head focus |
Thursday: Lower A (Quads/Hamstrings/Calves)
| Exercise | Sets | Reps | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Barbell Back Squat | 5 | 5โ7 | Primary strength movement |
| Leg Press | 4 | 10โ12 | High foot placement for quads |
| Bulgarian Split Squat | 3 | 10โ12 per leg | Unilateral balance |
| Romanian Deadlift | 4 | 8โ10 | Hamstring priority |
| Leg Curl | 3 | 12โ15 | Seated preferred |
| Standing Calf Raise | 5 | 12โ15 | Full ROM, 2-second hold |
Friday: Upper B (Back/Biceps/Rear Delts)
| Exercise | Sets | Reps | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Barbell Row | 4 | 6โ8 | Pronated grip, heavy |
| Weighted Pull-Up | 4 | 6โ10 | Add weight via belt |
| Seated Cable Row | 3 | 10โ12 | V-bar, elbows tight |
| Single-Arm Dumbbell Row | 3 | 10โ12 per arm | Full stretch at bottom |
| Face Pull | 4 | 15โ20 | Rear delt and rotator cuff |
| Barbell Curl | 3 | 8โ10 | Heavy, controlled |
| Hammer Curl | 3 | 10โ12 | Brachialis and brachioradialis |
| Incline Dumbbell Curl | 2 | 12โ15 | Long head stretch |
Sunday: Lower B (Posterior Chain/Glutes/Calves)
| Exercise | Sets | Reps | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conventional Deadlift | 4 | 4โ6 | Max strength movement |
| Hack Squat or Leg Press | 4 | 10โ15 | Quad finisher |
| Glute-Ham Raise | 3 | 8โ12 | Eccentric focus |
| Leg Curl | 3 | 10โ15 | Lying or seated |
| Hip Thrust | 4 | 10โ12 | Glute-dominant |
| Seated Calf Raise | 5 | 15โ20 | Soleus focus |
8. Nutrition During Your Training-on-Cycle Block
- Protein: 1.0โ1.4g per pound of bodyweight daily. See our full guide on protein grams per day vs muscle growth.
- Calories: Bulking cycle: 300โ500 calorie surplus. Recomp cycle: maintenance to slight deficit. Cutting cycle: 200โ400 deficit maximum.
- Carbohydrates: Prioritize pre- and post-workout carbs for glycogen replenishment.
- Creatine: 5g/day. See our creatine guide.
9. Managing Joint Health While Training on Cycle
Rapid strength gains on a SARMs or steroid cycle significantly increase the risk of tendon rupture because muscle force outpaces connective tissue adaptation. Never increase working weights faster than 10 lbs per week on any major compound lift regardless of how strong you feel.
- Use lifting straps on pulling exercises to reduce grip fatigue without stressing the forearm tendons
- Include 1โ2 warm-up sets at 50โ60% 1RM before working sets on all compound lifts
- Prioritize BPC-157 or TB-500 peptides if any joint discomfort appears during a cycle
- Avoid maximum singles and doubles until at least week 4 of your cycle
- Program face pulls, band pull-aparts, and rotator cuff work in every upper body session
10. Deloads and Rest During a SARMs Cycle
For an 8-week cycle, plan one mini-deload at week 4โ5: reduce volume by 30%, keep intensity the same or slightly heavier, eliminate isolation work for that week only. For a 12-week cycle, schedule two deload weeks at weeks 5 and 10.
11. Post-Cycle Training: Protecting Your Gains After PCT
- Reduce weekly volume by 25โ30% during PCT weeks
- Maintain the same training frequency but shorten session length
- Accept temporary strength regression without chasing pre-cycle numbers
- Increase protein intake to 1.2โ1.5g/lb to offset the reduced anabolic environment
- Prioritize compound lifts only; eliminate most isolation work during PCT
12. Common Training Mistakes Enhanced Athletes Make
| Mistake | Why It Hurts | What to Do Instead |
|---|---|---|
| Keeping natural training volume on cycle | Leaves anabolic gains on the table; MPS exceeds the training stimulus | Add 2โ3 sets per muscle group per week as the cycle progresses |
| Maxing out on heavy singles immediately | Connective tissue is not yet adapted; high rupture risk in weeks 1โ3 | Wait until week 4โ5 to push maximal intensity; prioritize volume first |
| Skipping deloads during cycle | CNS fatigue accumulates and performance stalls by week 6โ7 | Program a mini-deload at week 4โ5 |
| Training the same frequency as natural (3 days/week) | Enhanced recovery allows 2โ3x frequency; rare sessions waste anabolic opportunity | Train each muscle 2x per week minimum |
| Not tracking progressive overload | Without a log, strength gains are uneven and volume management is guesswork | Log every set, rep, and weight |
| Ignoring joint health signals | Tendon pain during cycle often escalates to rupture if ignored | Back off load at the first sign of joint discomfort |
| Cutting calories aggressively while bulking on SARMs | Anabolic compounds require calorie surplus to express full muscle-building effect | Maintain a 300โ500 calorie surplus on bulking cycles |
Key Takeaways: Training on a SARMs Cycle
- Training on a SARMs cycle requires 20โ30% more weekly volume than your natural baseline
- Train each muscle group 2โ3x per week to match the accelerated recovery rate SARMs provide
- Stay in the 6โ15 rep range for compounds; use higher reps for isolation and pump work
- Increase loads progressively week over week; 5โ10 lbs per compound lift per week is normal on strong cycles
- Protect connective tissue by limiting load increases to 10 lbs per week and warming up thoroughly
- Program a mini-deload at weeks 4โ5 to prevent CNS burnout
- Prioritize high protein intake and calorie surplus to feed the enhanced anabolic environment
- Reduce volume by 25โ30% during PCT; maintain frequency and focus on compound lifts only
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I train differently on a SARMs cycle vs a steroid cycle?
Yes, but the principles are the same; the magnitudes differ. Training on a SARMs cycle allows 15โ25 sets per muscle per week for most lifters, while a testosterone or anabolic steroid cycle can support 22โ30 sets. Both environments demand higher frequency and volume than natural training.
How much stronger will I get training on a SARMs cycle?
Strength gains during a SARMs cycle vary by compound. RAD-140 and LGD-4033 cycles typically produce 10โ25 lb increases on major compound lifts over an 8-week cycle when training is properly programmed. YK-11 and aggressive stacks can produce 25โ40 lb compound lift increases.
Can I train 6 days a week on a SARMs cycle?
Yes, for advanced enhanced athletes running strong compounds like RAD-140 or LGD-4033 at higher doses. A 6-day push/pull/legs rotation is a viable structure. Beginners on their first cycle should stick to 4 days per week to learn how their body responds.
Is it possible to overtrain on a SARMs cycle?
Yes, and it happens more often than people expect. Overtraining on a SARMs cycle typically manifests as joint pain, declining performance, disrupted sleep, and persistent fatigue. SARMs improve muscular recovery but do not prevent CNS fatigue or connective tissue overuse injuries.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not medical advice. The compounds and protocols discussed may carry serious health risks. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting any new supplement, peptide, hormone, or training protocol. FitScience does not encourage or endorse the use of any illegal substances.

