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Beginner Strength Program Guide

By e1RM Team · Last updated 2026-05-14

Build a beginner strength program with repeatable lifts, simple progression, realistic starting loads, and recovery rules that keep training moving.

Build around repeatable lifts

A beginner strength plan should make practice easy to repeat. Pick a squat pattern, a press, a hinge, a row or pull, and a small amount of accessory work.

The exact exercise list matters less than consistent technique and enough weekly exposure to improve.

Start lighter than your ego wants

Use loads you can complete with two or three reps in reserve. Early progress comes from skill, coordination, and consistency. Starting too heavy only makes the next week harder to plan.

Progress one variable at a time

Add weight when all prescribed reps are clean. If form breaks, repeat the load. If the same load stalls for several sessions, reduce the load slightly and rebuild.

Recovery is part of the program

Sleep, food, and rest days determine how quickly training turns into progress. A simple plan done consistently beats an advanced plan you cannot recover from.

Who writes this

e1RM is built by an indie developer who lifts. The math behind every calculator is double-checked against original source papers (Epley, Brzycki, Lombardi, etc.). Training percentages and intensity recommendations are pulled from standard intermediate barbell programs (5/3/1, nSuns, Texas Method, GZCL) rather than invented. Have a correction or a feature request? Email feedback@e1rm.com.

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