Complete Glute Training Guide: Science-Based Glute Development

Build strong, powerful glutes with this comprehensive, science-based training guide from Dr. Mike Israetel and RP Strength. Learn the optimal volume landmarks, exercise selection, and programming strategies used by professional athletes and physique competitors to maximize glute development and create the lower body strength you're training for.

🎯 Glute Training Essentials (TL;DR)

  • Weekly Volume: 8-24 sets per week for most trainees (6-8 sets minimum for growth)
  • Training Frequency: 2-5 times per week works best for most people
  • Best Rep Ranges: 5-10 reps for deadlifts, 10-20 reps for hip thrusts, 20-30 reps for lunges
  • Key Exercises: Hip thrusts, sumo deadlifts, walking lunges, machine kickbacks
  • Critical Point: Glutes can grow from quad/hamstring work alone, but targeted training accelerates development

Understanding Glute Development

The glutes are unique among major muscle groups because they can receive significant growth stimulus from compound quad and hamstring exercises. However, targeted glute training dramatically accelerates development beyond what's possible with squats and deadlifts alone.

Three Categories of Glute Training

  • Compound hip-dominant movements: Deadlifts and sumo squats that target glutes with heavy loads
  • Hip thrust movements: Direct glute training with maximal hip extension under load
  • Unilateral movements: Single-leg exercises like lunges that emphasize stability and range of motion

Programming principle: Most weeks should include compound movements, hip thrust variations, and some form of lunging for complete glute development.

Dr. Mike Israetel's Complete Glute Training Guide

Here are some helpful tips for your glute training. Please note that these are averages based on our experience working with lots of clients and our own training. The recommendations here should be food for thought or places to start, not dogmatic scriptures to follow to the letter.

If you'd like to learn to build your own programs or just explore, give this whole guide a read. If you like what you see and you want to train with these concepts taken into account automatically, give the RP Hypertrophy App a try!

Glute Training Volume Guidelines

First, a few quick definitions of the Volume Landmarks:

Volume Landmark Definitions

  • MV = Maintenance Volume: The amount you need to train in order to keep the muscle you have in the context of a whole body training program.
  • MEV = Minimum Effective Volume: The amount you need to train in order to make any measurable improvements in muscle mass over time in the context of a whole body training program.
  • MAV = Maximum Adaptive Volume: The average amount of training volume over time that is likely to lead to your best long term gains in muscle mass in the context of a whole body training program.
  • MRV = Maximum Recoverable Volume: The maximum amount of volume you can train with regularly and still barely recover from in the context of a whole body training program. Doing more than this would cause worse results than doing less.
  • MAV*P = Maximum Adaptive Volume (Primary Priority): The average amount of training volume over time that is likely to lead to your best long term gains in muscle mass for a muscle if you prioritize its training and reduce the training for other muscles substantially, giving the primarily prioritized muscle more resources via which to recover from and benefit from more training.
  • MRV*P = Maximum Recoverable Volume (Primary Priority): The maximum amount of volume you can train with regularly and still barely recover from for this muscle if you prioritize its training and reduce the training for other muscles substantially, giving the primarily prioritized muscle more resources via which to recover from and benefit from more training. Doing more than this would cause worse results than doing less.

Now, let's look at some common values for these Volume Landmarks. You can use these as helpful places to start thinking about or building your own program.

MV MEV MAV MRV MAV*P MRV*P
2-6 6-8 8-24 24-30 24-30 30-40+

Important Volume Notes

  • These are the landmarks for serious, intermediate lifters. Folks who have been training (mostly) whole body for 3-7 years. If you're a beginner, all your volume landmarks are likely substantially lower, so ease in and focus on improving your technique with low volumes and steady progressions with load. If you're advanced, your volume landmarks will be similar to the intermediate ones listed, especially assuming you've been perfecting your technique on the exercises and finding which exercises and rep ranges work best for you.
  • These are averages for many people and it's possible you're significantly higher or lower than these numbers. We recommend starting on the low end and tracking your recovery from week to week in the muscle (you're recovering if every week your muscles heal completely and return to their strongest or beyond by next week). Eventually, you'll have a very good idea of your volume landmarks. Alternatively, you can just have the RP Hypertrophy App do all the work for you!
  • If you greatly reduce your total body volume and focus more of your efforts on your target muscles (and perhaps 2-3 other major muscle groups as primary focus, with the rest on secondary focus), they can recover from more and grow bigger than ever. The best way to optimize for such phases is by assigning 3-4 weekly sessions to the target muscle so that you can ramp up to the highest weekly volumes. This is tough to do in just 1-2 weekly sessions, as you are likely to exceed the 8-12 set per muscle per session maximum, beyond which systemic fatigue makes more training within that session very inefficient. You can do such specialization phases multiple times per year, and easily configure them in the RP Hypertrophy App.
  • You'll notice that MVs and MEVs for glutes can be as few as zero sets per week. This is because the glutes can get enough work to grow robustly and definitely enough work to maintain their gained size through proper quad and hamstring training, especially from exercises that have a high degree of hip flexion like squats, stiff-legged deadlifts, and good-mornings. If you'd like to grow your glutes beyond just what they're due with hamstring and quad training, adding in glute-targeted exercise volumes is a wise idea. However, please note that the more quad and ham work you already do, the less glute work you both will need and will be able to recover from. Alternatively, if you train your quads and hams minimally, you might both need and be able to tolerate quite a bit of targeted glute work.

Best Glute Exercises

The following exercises are organized by category to ensure complete glute development. Each links to a technique video for proper form:

Exercise Selection and Variation Strategy

When choosing your weekly glute exercises for maximal glute development (if you're a bikini competitor, for example), you should make sure to do at least one compound glute move (like deficit sumo deadlifts) and one hip thrust move (like glute bridges) every week. It also pays to do some form of lunge on a regular basis, if not in every meso, then in most mesos.

Weekly Exercise Distribution

Within a training session, we recommend including between 1 and 2 different glute exercises, but no more than that in most cases, as doing more than 2 glute movements in one session is likely just a needless burning of potential exercise variations you can save for later mesocycles. Within a single week (microcycle) of training, we recommend between 2 and 5 different glute exercises.

For example, if you train glutes 3x a week, you can do a heavy deficit sumo pull on one day, a barbell hip thrust on the next day, and a lunge version on the last day for 3 total exercises in the week. On the other hand, if you train glute 6x per week, you might want to choose (though don't have to choose) as many as 5 different exercises, with only one of them repeated in a heavier/lighter arrangement.

Because you want to keep exercises variations fresh for when you need to change exercises (through injury or staleness, for example), you should use as few exercises per week (and thus, per mesocycle, as we recommend keeping the same exercises in every week of each meso) as you can to get the job done. If you can just do a few more sets of barbell hip thrusts and get a great workout, there's no reason to switch to dumbbell single leg hip thrusts, for example. If you're doing an exercise, there should be a reason for it.

When to Change Exercises

Lastly, how do you know when it's time to switch out a given exercise from your rotation to another exercise in your list of effective choices? The decision is based on answering just a few questions about the exercise you're currently using:

  • Are you still making gains in rep strength on the exercise?
  • Is the exercise causing any aches or pains that are connective tissue related? And are these getting worse with each week or several weeks?
  • Is there a phasic need for the exercise to change? In other words, is the exercise appropriate for the rep range you're trying to use it for? Example: dumbbell lunges for sets of 5 might be unsafe, but sumo deficit deadlifts for sets of 5 are perfectly safe.
  • Are you getting a good mind-muscle connection on the exercise, or is it feeling stale and annoying to do?

If you are still hitting PRs on the exercise, it's not causing any undue pains, you're getting a good mind-muscle connection, and there's no other need to change it, then don't change it! If this means you keep an exercise around for up to a year or more, so be it! But if an exercise isn't yielding any more PRs for a whole meso (especially on a muscle gain or maintenance phase), if it's hurting you in the "bad" way, if it feels super stale, and/or if you have to dump it because it's not appropriate to an upcoming rep range target, then you should replace it. Many times, the questions will fall on both sides, and then it's up to you to make a wise choice considering all the 4 variables above.

Range of Motion and Technique

Stretching the glutes a ton is a great way to cause extra muscle growth stimulus. In glute training, you thus want to create the biggest angle possible between your pelvis and the femur, so that the glutes are stretched as much as possible. This can be arranged in all glute exercises, especially front-foot elevated lunging, where the deeper the lunge is, assuming you're still able to stretch your glute, the better.

Critical technique points:

  • Hip thrusts: Full range of motion with peak contraction holds
  • Deadlifts: Complete hip hinge with full glute stretch at bottom
  • Lunges: Deep range of motion to maximize glute stretch
  • Machine work: Control the eccentric and emphasize the stretch

Some peak contractions (with 1-2 second top-holds) may be beneficial in hip thrusts of various kinds in order to improve the mind-muscle connection for especially those lifters struggling with one in glute exercises.

Optimal Loading and Rep Ranges

In general, like all muscles, the glutes benefit from weights in the 30%-85% 1RM range, which in many people roughly translates to a weight that results in between 5 and 30 reps on a first set taken to failure. We can split this range into heavy (5-10,) moderate (10-20), and light (20-30) categories, as there are tradeoffs to make between all of them.

Rep Range Distribution Strategy

The first point on loading is that the glutes, like most muscles, seem to benefit from some training in all three of the rep ranges listed above. Because the moderate (10-20 rep) range often offers the best tradeoff between stimulus, fatigue, injury risk, and slow/fast fiber specificity, and mind-muscle connection, an argument can be made that a first-time program design could have most weekly working sets for the glute in this range, perhaps up to about 50% of them. The other 50% can perhaps be split evenly between the heavy (5-10) and light (20-30) rep ranges, as loading range diversity has been shown to be a potential benefit in its own right.

Exercise-Specific Rep Range Considerations

Deadlifts: Should probably be done in the 5-10 range and not much higher, as the whole point of deadlifts is to impose high absolute forces.

Heavy compound movements: Deadlifts, sumo squats and other axially-loaded heavy movements that require one to support themselves in gravity-resistant posture are best not done in the 20-30 rep range because the duration of such a set may fatigue supporting muscles before the glutes themselves are fatigued, thus preventing true failure proximity and thus best gains in the glutes.

Lunges: Are not likely the safest in the 5-10 range, especially if they are walking lunges, but are excellent in the 20-30 range.

Hip thrusts: Work excellently across all rep ranges, with moderate (10-20) being optimal for most people.

Weekly Training Sequence

When constructing a weekly training plan, it's probably a good idea to train the heavy ranges before the lighter ranges. Because both types of training cause fatigue, they all interfere with each other to some extent. However, the muscle and connective tissue damage from heavier training is likely more substantial and presents a higher risk of injury if some damage already exists from earlier training. Thus, if you do sets of 5-10 on Monday and (nearly always) sustain some form of micro-tearing, sets of 10-20 on Wednesday are lower in absolute force magnitude and are unlikely to cause the micro-tearing to expand into a notable injury. On the other hand, if you're pre-damaged from lots of sets of 10-20 on Monday, going even heavier in such a state on Wednesday in the 5-10 range is a bit more likely to result in injury. Thus, a potential sequencing of heavy-moderate-light during the week might be advisable, with a day or two of extra rest after the light session and before the next heavy session to make sure most damage has been healed and another productive week can begin.

Sample Weekly Arrangement

Monday:

  • Barbell Hip Thrusts 3 sets, 5-10 reps
  • Sumo Deficit Deadlifts 3 sets, 5-10 reps

Wednesday:

  • Barbell Single-Leg Hip Thrusts 5 sets, 10-20 reps
  • Sumo Squats 3 sets, 10-20 reps

Friday:

  • Barbell Walking Lunges 4 sets, 20-30 reps

Based on your personal responses to each of the main rep ranges, you can adjust how much volume you perform in any of them. For example, if you notice that you get a better stimulus (pumps, soreness, mind-muscle connection, etc.) and lower fatigue (joint stress, systemic fatigue, joint soreness, etc.) in some of the ranges vs. others, you can do more sets in those ranges and a bit less in others, though you should in most cases still include at least some work in the least productive ranges. For example, you might find that neither 5-10 nor 20-30 rep ranges work very well for your glute training, so you might only do a few sets of both in most weeks and do the vast majority of your sets in the 10-20 range.

Rest Times Between Sets

When determining how long to rest between any two sets in training, our goal is for enough rest to be taken such that the next set is at least close to maximally productive. How can we ensure this? By answering 4 basic questions about our recovery status:

  1. Has the target muscle locally recovered to do at least 5 reps on the next set?
  2. Has the nervous system recovered enough to remove it as a limiting factor to target muscle performance?
  3. Has the cardiorespiratory system recovered enough to remove it as a limiting factor to target muscle performance?
  4. Have synergist muscles in the exercise being performed recovered enough to remove them as a limiting factors to target muscle performance?

It might take only 1-2 minutes to recover very well (let's say, 90%) on all of those factors, but because set to set recovery is asymptotic in nature, it might take another 3 minutes to get to 95% recovery and another 10 minutes more to get to 99% recovery. Since you only have so much time to spend in the gym, 10 "90% recovered sets" in 45 minutes of training is a much more anabolic stimulus than only 3 "99% recovered" sets in that same amount of time. Thus, our recommendation is to make sure you can clearly check all 4 boxes of recovery above, but to not wait much longer than what can be considered "very good" recovery in the incredibly inefficient quest for "near perfect recovery."

Practical Rest Time Assessment

Here's an example of what can be considered "very good" recovery between sets of glute training. Before you do another set of lunges, ask yourself:

  1. Are my glutes still burning from the last set, or do they feel ok again?
  2. Do I feel like I can push hard with my glutes again, and I am mentally ready for another hard set, or do I need more time to rest?
  3. Is my breathing more or less back to normal, or is it still very heavy?
  4. Are my quads and lower back still very fatigued, or are they ready to support my glutes in the upcoming set of barbell curls?

If you can get the green light on all of these, you're probably ready to do another set, and waiting much longer will almost certainly not be of benefit.

Expected rest times: You'll notice that depending on the exercise and on the lifter, very different rest times will be generated by this questionnaire. For example, machine kickbacks do not require much body support and are only done one glute at a time, so they tax the #2 and #3 fatigue sources very little, and rest times can be less than 45 seconds, whereas sumo deficit deadlifts might need 3 minutes between sets just to regain normal breathing. And if you're on the larger and stronger side of things, and your cardio isn't great, you'll be resting much longer than someone smaller, not as strong, and in excellent cardio shape. While average rest times between sets of glute training will be between 45 seconds and 3 minutes, the most important consideration is to take the rest time you need, and not copy someone else's, rush the process, or sit around needlessly for minutes after all 4 factors are good to go for your next set to commence.

Training Frequency Optimization

There are two main considerations for determining training frequency. The first is the duration of the increase in muscle growth seen after a bout of training between MEV and MRV. If such an increase in muscle growth lasts 7 days, then perhaps a once a week frequency is optimal. If such an increase lasts only a day, then perhaps 6 days a week for the same muscle group is much better. While direct research on muscle growth timecourses is very limited, it seems that typical training might cause a reliable 24-48 hour increase in muscle growth. This would mean that if muscle growth elevation was the only variable of concern with regards to frequency, we should train every muscle 3-6 times per week.

However, the second main consideration on determining training frequency is recovery. A single bout of training between MEV and MRV causes muscle growth to occur, but it also presents some degree of fatigue. If we are to progress in training and allow adaptations to fully take hold over days and weeks, we must allow enough time to elapse between overloading sessions for at least most fatigue to dissipate. On average, the exact amount of fatigue dissipation must be at least enough to allow performance to return to baseline or higher, such than an overload can be presented. In other words, if you can normally hip thrust 225 for 15 reps, asking yourself "when should my next glute workout be after this last one" can be answered by "when will you be recovered enough to be able to hip thrust at least 225 for 15 reps?" The timecourse of fatigue is usually a bit longer than that of muscle growth, unfortunately, so that for most people, recovery, not muscle growth cessation, will be the limiting factor on frequency. In most per-session MEV-MRV training volumes, fatigue will take between 1-2 days to come back down enough to restore or improve on past performance, and that highly depends on the muscle in question and even the exercises used.

Finding Your Optimal Frequency

How do you determine what training frequency is appropriate for you? You can start by training your glutes at per-session MEV volumes. After each session, you note when soreness has abated and when you feel recovered enough psychologically to attempt another overloading workout. When you're ready, and no later, go back to the gym and train glutes again, with volumes just a bit higher than MEV (using the RP Set Progression Algorithm). If you're recovering on time, keep coming back and training your glutes as often as you have been. If you notice that you need more time to recover, add a day to your next post-glute-training window. If you're recovering faster than you thought you could, train a bit more often. After a mesocycle of such adjustments, you will have a rough but very good guess as to what your average glute training frequency can be for most of your programs going forward. In fact, your frequency will not only be tailored exactly to your responses, but you'll be pretty sure it's close to optimal because it was literally derived from how fast you can recover; which is the very primary variable that determines frequency.

Starting expectations: Just so that you have some expectation of where to start, most individuals can recover from glute training at a timecourse that allows for 2-5 sessions of glutes per week at MEV-MRV volumes. However, only through direct experimentation on yourself can you tell where in this range is best for you and if maybe you're even outside of this range. Just remember that so long as you're recovered to train again (can perform at or above normal levels), training is a better idea than waiting to train, because higher frequency programs, at least in the short term, have shown to generate more muscle growth than needlessly lower ones.

Exercise rotation for frequency: To improve your training frequency, you can alternate exercise selections between successive glute workouts. For example, if you do barbell hip thrusts on one day, you might do single-leg hip thrusts or machine kickbacks the next day, and so on. This rotation of slightly different exercises and movement patterns can take repeated stress off of very small and specific parts of your muscles and connective tissues, which might reduce chronic injury risk exposure.

Please note that when you're determining your glute training frequency, you'll have to juggle it a bit with your quad training frequency, as unrecovered glutes can impede your quad training, and even quad training itself can tax your glutes enough to require a frequency reduction for direct glute training. Also, because deadlifts are exceptionally fatiguing, we don't recommend starting with any more than one deadlift session per week and never working up to more than two at most for most individuals.

Periodization and Long-Term Programming

There are a few relevant timescales in periodization:

  • The repetition (1-9 seconds)
  • The set (5-30 repetitions)
  • The exercise (1-5 sets)
  • The session (2-6 exercises)
  • The day (0-2 sessions)
  • The microcycle (usually 1 week of training)
  • The mesocycle (3-12 weeks)
  • The block (1-4 mesoscycles)
  • The macrocycle (1-4 blocks)

We've already covered the most important details on most of these timescales, so in this section, we'll focus on a brief understanding of how to manipulate training over a typical mesocycle and training block.

Mesocycle Structure

A mesocycle is composed of two phases: the accumulation phase and the deload phase. The accumulation phase lasts as long as it takes to hit systemic MRV, which, because fatigue accumulates in MEV+ training, has to happen at some point. For beginners with very high recovery abilities, it can take up to 12 weeks of increasingly more demanding training for systemic MRV to be reached and a deload to be required. For very advanced lifters that have very strong, large, and volume-resistant muscles, it can take only 3-4 weeks of accumulation training to reach systemic MRV and need to deload. The deload phase is designed to bring down the fatigue from the accumulation phase, and it usually only lasts a week or so (one microcycle).

Weekly Progression Strategy

When you begin a mesocycle of training, you should probably begin at or close to your MEV for all the muscle groups you'd like to improve during that mesocycle, for reasons described extensively in our book on the subject of training volume. Week to week, you can manipulate working sets by using the Set Progression algorithm from the Training Volume Landmarks for Muscle Growth article. You should seek to keep reps stable from week to week while letting your RIR decline from a 3 or 4 RIR start until it gets down to 0 (for exercises that don't threaten the bar falling on you) or 1 (for those that do) in the last week of training. The way you keep the reps stable as RIR falls is by adding weight to the exercises you're using. How much weight to add is a matter of an educated guess on your part. You want to add enough weight to get your target RIR with the same reps as last week. For example, if you did 100lbs last week for 10 reps on your first set of an exercise at 2 RIR, how much should you do next week to get 10 reps again but at 1 RIR? Well, you might think that adding 2.5lbs would be too easy, and you could honestly get 11 reps with that next week at 1 RIR, but adding 10lbs might require you to push to 0 RIR to get 10 reps, so you would just add 5lbs and that will probably take you where you need to be. If you're making very rapid gains on an exercise, you might have a few weeks here and there where even though you increased weight by a bit, your RIR didn't decline. You might have hit 8 reps at 100lbs at 3 RIR last week, and then hit 8 reps again at 3 RIR with 105lbs this week! This is a good thing, and lots of these weeks are how beginners can sometimes crank out up to 12 weeks of accumulation. Since getting to failure too soon is MUCH WORSE than getting there a bit slower, we recommend being conservative on nearly all weekly weight additions.

If you can't realistically add weight, you can add reps. This might happen when, for example, you are using the 25lb dumbbells one week and then having to do the 30lbers next week, wildly slashing your reps. Just remember to stay within your general rep range and not leave it in any given meso. If you start at sets of about 5 reps, don't add any more reps than will give you sets of 10, because that will take you out of the 5-10 range and no longer fulfil the needs of your training program in the way it was intended. If you start to exit a range by adding reps, add weight to take yourself back into that range, even if the increments are big and take you all the way down to the bottom of the range. Yes, this might mean that last week you were doing 20 reps with the 20lb dumbbells on your first set, and this week you're back to only 10 reps with the 25lbers at the same or one less RIR, but that's proper training!

Managing Local and Systemic MRV

Once you cannot tie previous reps in at least two consecutive sessions for a given muscle group, you have likely hit its local MRV, and need to reduce its training volume. Our recommendation is to take the next planned session with half of the planned working sets, half of the planned reps, and half of the load for recovery. In the session after, resume your load progression from before, but start at a number of sets halfway between where you started the meso and your MRV set number, and an RIR of around 2. Thus, for example, if you hit 100lbs for 10 reps on a first set last session (6 total sets in the session for that muscle group), whereas the week before, you hit 95lbs for 12 reps, your next workout can be 50lbs for 3 sets of about 5 reps. Then, next week, you resume with 105lbs, but shoot for 2 RIR and do 4 sets total, because you started the meso at 2 sets, and 4 is halfway between 2 and 6 sets. Continue to train normally after that until and unless you hit MRV again.

Systemic MRV is when you're training so hard that your sleep quality declines, your appetite falls, and you might get sick more often. It's also when nearly all of your muscles start to hit local MRVs at about the same time. Once that happens (and be honest with yourself when it does), stop the accumulation phase and begin the deload phase.

The deload can be done many ways, but our recommendation is to take sets to MEV for the whole week. The load should be week 1's load for the first half of the week and ½ of week 1's load for the second half. The reps should be roughly half of all week 1's reps for all sets during the deload week. This makes the deload VERY EASY, which is the whole point, since hard training doesn't bring down fatigue! You should feel refreshed and be craving hard training toward the end of your deload week if you're setting it up correctly.

Training Block Periodization

Those are the basics of periodization over the mesoscycle. The training block is a sequence of mesocycles strung together for one unifying purpose. For example, a muscle gain block may be 3 mesocycles of 6 weeks each, one after another, with weight gain the goal for all 18 of those total weeks, or a fat loss block might be 2 mesocycles of 5 weeks long during which weight loss is the goal for all 10 of those weeks.

Though we can potentially alter all training variables over a training block, frequency, exercise selection, and loading are definitely noteworthy.

Example Block Progression for Glutes:

Meso 1:

  • Monday Sumo Deficit Deadlifts (5-10)
  • Thursday Sumo Squats (10-20)

Meso 2:

  • Monday Sumo Deficit Deadlifts (5-10)
  • Wednesday Sumo Squats (10-20)
  • Friday Hip Thrusts (10-20)

Meso 3:

  • Monday Sumo Deficit Deadlifts (5-10)
  • Wednesday Sumo Squats (10-20)
  • Friday Hip Thrusts (10-20)
  • Saturday Machine Kickbacks (20-30)

Once you've done a whole training block, you can do a mesocycle of low frequency (2x) training at MV with mostly 5-10 rep ranges and compound movements to resensitize your muscles to volume and growth again. This meso can take about a month and can be good to pair with maintenance eating to bring down any diet fatigue you might have from hard dieting in the last block. If you don't have any real diet fatigue, you can instead take around 2 weeks of active rest (sometimes just one week if you count the deload after your last meso), where you train with 1x frequency for every muscle, with only about 2 working sets per muscle per session, and with weights that are around 50% of your 5-10 range, but doing them for only 5-10 reps per set. This ultra-easy training can make you ready for another whole block of training in the gym and can even be replaced with no training at all if you're feeling really beat up or tired. Once you've taken this easy time, you're probably ready to give another training block a go!

Advanced Training Modalities

Straight Sets

Straight sets are sets performed to 0-4 RIR, with enough rest time to recover all 4 limiting factors (see the rest time section above for details). Straight sets are excellent for the glutes, since their training is usually so systemically and synergistically fatiguing.

Down Sets

Down sets are straight sets, but with less weight (usually 10-20% less) than the previous straight sets. By lowering the weight, you can keep reps over 5 per set, and/or keep the mind-muscle connection high and keep technique excellent to continue to have a high stimulus to fatigue ratio in every set of that exercise. Down sets can be an excellent tool for glute training, especially as fatigue goes up on various hip thrusts and the mind-muscle connection might falter. With glutes, the mind-muscle connection seems best at the lightest loads and worst at the heaviest, making down sets more useful for glute training than they are for many other muscles.

Controlled Eccentrics and Pauses

Concentric, eccentric, and isometric phases of each exercise can be between half a second and 3 seconds long and still confer near-optimal effects on hypertrophy. In some cases, slowing down eccentrics and extending pauses can enhance technique, mind-muscle connection, and safety of the exercise. While the glutes get an excellent stretch from full-rom training anyway and almost never get injured, they do benefit greatly from an extended peak contraction hold, especially in hip thrusts and kickbacks of various sorts, where that last several inches of push at the top is where much of the glute involvement occurs.

Giant Sets

Giant sets give you a certain weight to lift, an RIR range to hit (usually 0-4 RIR), and a goal of total reps over as many sets as it takes. An example is aiming to do 100lbs for however many sets it takes to get 60 total reps, while taking normal rest between each set. Such an approach can take the focus off of having to match or exceed the per-set reps you did last week, and can thus let you super-focus on technique and the mind-muscle connection, thus potentially improving both and getting more out of the training with exercises than can demand lots of technique and mind-muscle connection to be effective. If you'd like to be super precise in counting sets for your volume landmarks, we recommend counting giant sets at 2/3 of the contribution of straight sets, such that if you did 6 total sets to get to your giant set rep target, you can count that as 4 sets of "straight set equivalency" in terms of stimulus and fatigue. This discount is because with a higher focus on technique and mind-muscle connection and a lower focus on getting as many reps per set as possible, giant sets likely don't cause as much fatigue as straight sets. These come in very handy especially when first learning how to develop a mind-muscle connection with glute bridges. Glute bridges are very, very easy to just "rep out" with much worse glute involvement than is possible if you really focus on the technique and mind-muscle connection of each rep and not on just getting a certain number of reps.

Myoreps

Myoreps are just like straight sets in that they must check all 4 recovery boxes before doing another set. However, they are different in two ways. First, while the first set is usually between 10-20 reps (0-2 RIR), the next multiple sets only rest long enough to get between 5 and 10 reps each. This is to maximize the ratio of effective (near-failure) reps to total reps over the multiple sets. Secondly, for all of those successive sets to register the highest number of effective reps per set, the local recovery factor (the muscle and its motor nerve) must be by far the most limiting, so that successive sets are not limited by the CNS, the lungs, and other muscles and thus the final reps of each set really do recruit and tense the fastest and most growth-prone motor units. For this to be possible, only isolation exercises without limiting synergists are appropriate for myoreps. If you'd like to be super precise in counting sets for your volume landmarks, we recommend counting myorep sets each as the equivalent of a straight set. While they do have fewer reps, they are often taken closer to failure and thus turn out to be about as fatiguing. Myoreps can come in handy on walking lunges, kickbacks, and glute bridges. However, various squats and deadlifts are so systemically fatiguing that myoreps are wildly inappropriate with them.

Drop Sets

Drop sets are exactly like myoreps, but with even shorter rest times because weight is reduced by 10-20% on average between each set. The effects are very similar. The advantage of drop sets is their time saving, and their slight disadvantage over myoreps is that dropping the weight a lot can reduce mind-muscle connection via reducing tension perception. If you'd like to be super precise in counting sets for your volume landmarks, we recommend counting drop sets each as the equivalent of a straight set. While they do have fewer reps and lighter loads, they are often taken closer to failure and in such rapid and painful succession that they turn out to be about as fatiguing. Because the glutes are so mind-muscle dependent, drop sets are not often the best way to approach glute training.

Pre-Exhaust Supersets

These supersets begin with an isolation exercise for a given muscle group, and with no rest after taking it to 0-2 RIR, end with a compound exercise to which the target muscle is a big contributor. The local pre-exhaust of the isolation exercise allows the target muscle to be by far the limiting factor for the compound exercise that follows, and lets it be exposed to a few more effective reps than it otherwise would be if that compound was done fresh. After each 2-exercise superset, 4-factor rest is again taken until the next 2-exercise superset begins. If you'd like to be super precise in counting sets for your volume landmarks, we recommend counting pre-exhaust supersets as 1.5x as the equivalent of a straight set. This is because the compound exercise done in the second part of the set is only limited (highly) by the target pre-exhausted muscle, and this isn't nearly as fatiguing, especially systemically, as it would be if it were done fresh. Because glute compounds are so systemically fatiguing, it can pay to pre-exhaust the glutes with more isolation work before beginning the compounds. For example, glute bridges before a set of lunges can be an excellent way to make the lunges much more limited by the glutes than by the quads, for example.

Occlusion Sets

Occlusion training is myorep training with the limb occluded just above the muscle. This occlusion causes the local muscle and nerve to be far and away the limiting factors on recovery between sets, and thus allows you to focus in on a target muscle group that might have otherwise been difficult to reach with non-occluded movements. The big benefit is time saving, because rest between occluded sets is only long enough to get another 5 reps, and you can also use weights at the very low end of the growth range and even a bit lower (20-30% 1RM). The downside is that the local vasculature adapts very quickly to occlusion, so it might not be very effective for any more than a mesocycle or two in a row. Also, some muscles are much harder than others to occlude, or even impossible to occlude. If you'd like to be super precise in counting sets for your volume landmarks, we recommend counting occlusion sets each as the equivalent of 2/3 of a straight set, as they cause much less systemic fatigue due to the lower reps and weights used. It's tough to occlude the glutes. It is possible, but this also occludes the quad, hams, and calves, and they can become limiting factors on occluded glute moves quite quickly.

Lengthened Partials

Direct experimentation has shown multiple times that loading the muscles when they are at their longest lengths is an extra boost to muscle growth. Thus, doing some bottom ½ or bottom 1/3 partials can be an effective training modality, especially when the bottom end is loaded heavily in the exercise in question. You can do entire sets of just lengthened partials, or do a normal ROM set and then finish the set with a superset of lengthened partials. Give it a shot!

Sample Programming

The following sample programs demonstrate practical application of the principles outlined in this guide, showing how to progress volume, intensity, and exercise selection across multiple mesocycles for optimal glute development.

Meso 1

Glute Training Progression - Meso 1
Day Exercise Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4 Deload
Monday
Deficit Deadlifts
5-10 reps 3 sets, 245lb, 3 RIR 3 sets, 250lb, 2 RIR 3 sets, 255lb, 1 RIR 4 sets, 260lb, 0 RIR 2 sets, 2-5 reps, 245lb, 5+ RIR
Thursday
Barbell Hip Thrusts
10-20 reps 3 sets, 165lb, 3 RIR 4 sets, 170lb, 2 RIR 4 sets, 175lb, 1 RIR 5 sets, 180lb, 0 RIR 2 sets, 5-10 reps, 80lb, 5+ RIR

Meso 2

Glute Training Progression - Meso 2
Day Exercise Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4 Deload
Monday
Deficit Deadlifts
5-10 reps 3 sets, 250lb, 3 RIR 4 sets, 255lb, 2 RIR 4 sets, 260lb, 1 RIR 5 sets, 265lb, 0 RIR 2 sets, 2-5 reps, 250lb, 5+ RIR
Wednesday
Barbell Hip Thrusts
10-20 reps 4 sets, 170lb, 3 RIR 4 sets, 175lb, 2 RIR 5 sets, 180lb, 1 RIR 5 sets, 185lb, 0 RIR 2 sets, 5-10 reps, 170lb, 5+ RIR
Friday
Single-Leg Hip Thrusts
10-20 reps 3 sets, 50lb, 3 RIR 4 sets, 50lb, 2 RIR 4 sets, 55lb, 1 RIR 5 sets, 55lb, 0 RIR 2 sets, 5-10 reps, 25lb, 5+ RIR

Meso 3

Glute Training Progression - Meso 3
Day Exercise Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4 Deload
Monday
Deficit Deadlifts
5-10 reps 3 sets, 255lb, 3 RIR 4 sets, 260lb, 2 RIR 4 sets, 265lb, 1 RIR 5 sets, 270lb, 0 RIR 2 sets, 2-5 reps, 255lb, 5+ RIR
Wednesday
Barbell Hip Thrusts
10-20 reps 4 sets, 175lb, 3 RIR 5 sets, 180lb, 2 RIR 5 sets, 185lb, 1 RIR 6 sets, 190lb, 0 RIR 2 sets, 5-10 reps, 175lb, 5+ RIR
Friday
Single-Leg Hip Thrusts
10-20 reps 4 sets, 55lb, 3 RIR 4 sets, 55lb, 2 RIR 5 sets, 60lb, 1 RIR 5 sets, 60lb, 0 RIR 2 sets, 5-10 reps, 25lb, 5+ RIR
Saturday
Barbell Walking Lunges
20-30 reps 2 sets, 60lb, 3 RIR 3 sets, 60lb, 2 RIR 3 sets, 65lb, 1 RIR 4 sets, 65lb, 0 RIR 2 sets, 15-10 reps, BW, 5+ RIR

Meso 4 (Resensitization)

Glute Training Progression - Meso 4 (Resensitization)
Day Exercise Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Deload
Monday
Deficit Deadlifts
5-10 reps 2 sets, 255lb, 3 RIR 2 sets, 260lb, 2 RIR 2 sets, 265lb, 1 RIR 2 sets, 2-5 reps, 255lb, 5+ RIR
Thursday
Barbell Hip Thrusts
5-10 reps 2 sets, 200lb, 3 RIR 2 sets, 205lb, 2 RIR 2 sets, 210lb, 1 RIR 2 sets, 2-5 reps, 100lb, 5+ RIR

Programming Notes:

  • RIR Color Guide: Green (5+ RIR) = Easy/Recovery Yellow (3 RIR) = Moderate Orange (2 RIR) = Hard Light Red (1 RIR) = Very Hard Red (0 RIR) = Maximal
  • Movement variety: Each week includes compound movements, hip thrusts, and unilateral work
  • Progression: Add sets each week, increase weight when you can complete all reps with perfect form
  • Safety first: Heavy deadlifts should be done early in the week when fresh
  • Recovery focus: Meso 4 reduces volume while maintaining strength for the next training block

Putting It All Together

This comprehensive guide provides everything you need to develop powerful glutes through science-based training. Remember these key principles:

🎯 Action Steps for Glute Success

  1. Emphasize the stretch: Deep range of motion is critical for glute development
  2. Include all three categories: Hip thrusts, deadlifts, and lunges for complete development
  3. Master the hip thrust: This movement provides direct glute training with high loads
  4. Use peak contractions: 1-2 second holds at the top of hip thrusts improve mind-muscle connection
  5. Progress systematically: Start conservative and build volume over mesocycles

For those wanting to implement these principles without the complexity of manual programming, the RP Hypertrophy App automates all of these calculations and adjustments based on your individual responses.

Want to explore training for other muscle groups? Check out our Complete Hypertrophy Training Guide which covers evidence-based training for every major muscle group.

🚀 Ready to Transform Your Glute Development?

Take the guesswork out of glute training with the RP Hypertrophy App:

  • ✅ Automatically calculates your optimal glute volume based on recovery
  • ✅ Provides exercise alternatives for any equipment setup
  • ✅ Includes technique videos for every glute exercise

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