If you want a program that builds muscle and strength without living in the gym, a full body workout is hard to beat. You train the whole body each session, recover, repeat. Simple. Effective. And perfect if you can only lift 3 days per week.
Full body training works because you practice the big lifts often and recover between sessions.
What Is a Full Body Workout?
A full body workout means each session includes:
- A lower-body movement (squat/hinge)
- An upper-body push (bench/overhead press)
- An upper-body pull (row/pull-up)
- Optional accessories (core, arms, calves)
You’re not doing 25 exercises. You’re doing the few that matter, consistently.
Full Body Workout vs Other Splits
If you’re choosing between splits, here’s the clean tradeoff:
| Split | Days/Week | Best For | Downside |
|---|---|---|---|
| Full Body | 3 | Busy schedules, beginners, strength focus | Sessions can feel “dense” if you add too much |
| Push Pull Legs | 5-6 | Hypertrophy, high volume | Requires more weekly time |
| Upper/Lower | 4 | Intermediate lifters | Harder to fit if you miss days |
Who Full Body Is Perfect For
If you can reliably train 3 days per week, full body is one of the highest return plans you can run. Miss a day? You’re still fine. You didn’t “skip legs.”
The Best 3-Day Full Body Workout Plan
Train on Monday/Wednesday/Friday (or any 3 non-consecutive days). Keep 1-2 reps in the tank on most sets. Add weight slowly.
Day A
| Exercise | Sets | Reps | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Back squat | 3 | 5-8 | Use a weight you can control |
| Bench press | 3 | 6-10 | Pause briefly on the chest |
| Row (cable/DB) | 3 | 8-12 | Full stretch at the bottom |
| Plank | 3 | 30-60s | Brace like someone’s about to punch you |
Day B
| Exercise | Sets | Reps | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Romanian deadlift | 3 | 6-10 | Hinge, don’t squat it |
| Overhead press | 3 | 6-10 | Ribs down, glutes tight |
| Pull-ups (or lat pulldown) | 3 | 6-12 | Control the lowering phase |
| Walking lunges | 2 | 10/leg | Light weight, clean reps |
Day C
| Exercise | Sets | Reps | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Leg press (or front squat) | 3 | 8-12 | Full depth you can control |
| Incline DB press | 3 | 8-12 | Slow lowering, strong lockout |
| Chest-supported row | 3 | 10-15 | Elbows drive back, don’t shrug |
| Calf raises | 3 | 10-15 | Pause at the stretch |
Progression (How to Keep Getting Results)
Use double progression:
- Pick a rep range (example: 6-10)
- When you hit the top end for all sets with good form, add 2.5-5 lb next session
If you feel run down for weeks, don’t “push through.” Take a deload week. It keeps progress moving.
FAQ
Is full body training good for building muscle?
Yes — especially if you train 3 days/week and progress over time. It’s one of the best ways to build muscle with limited weekly sessions.
How long should a full body workout take?
45-75 minutes. If you’re consistently over 90 minutes, you’re doing too much.
Can I do full body workouts at home?
Yes. Use our no equipment workouts and bodyweight exercises guides to build a home version.
Related Articles
- Strength Training for Beginners: How to Start Lifting Weights
- Hypertrophy Training: The Science-Backed Guide
- The Upper Lower Split: The Best 4-Day Workout Program
Part of the AMUNIX Workouts silo — building your complete fitness knowledge base.
Always consult with a healthcare professional before starting any new exercise program. This guide is for educational purposes only.