UnityLife
Fitness4 min readUpdated Apr 23, 2026Evidence-based

How Many Days a Week Should You Strength Train?

Two days a week does most of the work. Here is the research-backed answer and what to actually do on those days.

James Park

Medically reviewed by James Park, CSCS

Strength coach, Toronto ON

Written by UnityLife Admin

Updated April 2026 · Reviewed March 2026

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Strength training is the most under-done part of Canadian adult fitness. The good news is that most of the benefit comes from the first two sessions a week — you don’t need to live at the gym to get 80% of the return.

What the research shows

Two sessions per week produces roughly 80% of the strength and muscle gains of four sessions in beginners and most recreational adults.

Past three weekly sessions, returns diminish sharply for non-competitive lifters.

A minimal effective program

Day 1: squat pattern (goblet squat, lunge), push (push-up, dumbbell press), core (plank).

Day 2: hinge pattern (Romanian deadlift, hip bridge), pull (inverted row, band pull-aparts), carry (farmer’s carry).

30–45 minutes each, 48 hours apart.

The bottom line

Two 40-minute full-body sessions a week, separated by 48 hours. That is the CSEP-compatible minimum and plenty to change your body and grip strength.

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The bottom line

Two 40-minute full-body sessions a week, separated by 48 hours. That is the CSEP-compatible minimum and plenty to change your body and grip strength.

Frequently asked questions

  • Yes. A pair of adjustable dumbbells and a resistance band cover almost everything.

Sources & further reading

  1. Schoenfeld et al., 2016 — Journal of Sports Sciences (training frequency)

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