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6 Day Gym Workout Schedule: The Complete Push/Pull/Legs Guide

Two men planning a 6 day gym workout schedule on a whiteboard
Last updated: June 2026

6 Day Gym Workout Schedule: The Complete Push/Pull/Legs Guide

A 6-day gym schedule works by splitting training volume across six sessions, which makes each individual workout shorter and less draining than trying to pack the same volume into three or four longer sessions. The most effective structure for 6 days is push/pull/legs (PPL) run twice per week — each muscle group gets two dedicated training sessions with 48–72 hours of recovery between them.

This page covers who the 6-day schedule is actually suited for, the full workout plan with exercise tables for all six sessions, and how to progress on it without burning out.

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Who the 6-Day Schedule Is For

A 6-day programme is not for everyone, and choosing it before you’re ready is a common reason people stall or get injured. It suits lifters who meet all three of these criteria:

If any of those three aren’t in place, a 4-day upper/lower split will produce better results with lower dropout risk.

The 6-Day Push/Pull/Legs Schedule

PPL is the most efficient structure for 6 days because it groups muscles by function. Push muscles (chest, shoulders, triceps) all contribute to pressing movements and can be trained and recovered together. Pull muscles (back, biceps) all contribute to rowing and pulling movements. Legs get their own two sessions.

DaySessionPrimary Muscles
MondayPush AChest, shoulders, triceps
TuesdayPull ABack (lats, traps, rhomboids), biceps
WednesdayLegs AQuads, hamstrings, glutes, calves
ThursdayPush BChest, shoulders, triceps
FridayPull BBack, rear delts, biceps
SaturdayLegs BHamstrings, glutes, quads, calves
SundayRest

Sessions A and B are not identical. They share the same muscle groups but use different primary exercises, rep ranges, and emphasis — Push A centres on horizontal pressing, Push B on vertical pressing. This variation prevents accommodation while maintaining the twice-per-week muscle frequency that research on training frequency supports for maximising hypertrophy.

Related Reading

Workout Routine for Men: Beginner, Intermediate, and Advanced Plans →

The Six Workouts in Full

Rest 2 minutes between sets for compound exercises, 60–90 seconds for isolation work. Warm-up sets are not included in the numbers below.

Push A — Chest, Shoulders, Triceps

ExerciseSetsReps
Flat barbell bench press45–8
Incline dumbbell press38–12
Dumbbell flye212–15
Lateral raise410–15
Cable tricep pressdown310–15
Overhead tricep extension210–15

Pull A — Back, Biceps

ExerciseSetsReps
Reverse-grip lat pulldown48–12
Single-arm dumbbell row35–8
Kneeling cable pullover212–15
Face pull415–20
Standing dumbbell curl38–12
Hammer curl212–15

Legs A — Quads, Hamstrings, Calves

ExerciseSetsReps
Barbell back squat45–8
Leg press38–12
Leg extension212–15
Seated leg curl48–12
Standing calf raise45–8
Incline reverse crunch312–15

Related Reading

Workout Calendar: How to Plan and Follow a Monthly Training Schedule →

Push B — Shoulders, Chest, Triceps

ExerciseSetsReps
Barbell overhead press45–8
Flat dumbbell press48–12
Cable crossover315–20
Lateral raise315–20
Cable tricep pressdown215–20
Lying EZ-bar tricep extension312–15

Pull B — Back, Rear Delts, Biceps

ExerciseSetsReps
Wide-grip lat pulldown or pull-ups48–12
Wide-grip seated cable row38–12
Rear delt dumbbell fly210–15
Incline dumbbell shrug315–20
Incline dumbbell curl38–12
Dumbbell preacher curl212–15

Legs B — Hamstrings, Glutes, Quads, Calves

ExerciseSetsReps
Romanian deadlift48–12
Bulgarian split squat38–12
Leg press38–12
Seated leg curl38–12
Standing calf raise415–20
Ab wheel rollout312–15

Related Reading

AI Workout Generator: How It Works and How to Get the Most From It →

How to Progress on a 6-Day Split

The 6-day schedule only produces results if you’re systematically increasing the demand on your muscles over time. Use double progression: stay within the prescribed rep range and only add weight once you can complete the top end of that range cleanly across all working sets.

For example, if flat bench press calls for 4 sets of 5–8 reps:

Every 6–8 weeks, take a deload week: reduce volume by roughly half and drop intensity by 10–15%. Progress on a 6-day split accumulates systemic fatigue faster than lower-frequency programmes, and deloads prevent this from capping your gains.

Related Reading

30-Day Workout Plan: A Complete 4-Week Programme for Beginners →

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a 6-day workout schedule too much?
Not if you match volume to your recovery capacity and take a deload every 6–8 weeks. The risk isn’t the number of days — it’s too much volume per session or per week for your current fitness level. Start at the lower end of the rep ranges and build from there.

Can beginners follow a 6-day schedule?
No. Beginners make faster and more sustainable progress on 3 full-body sessions per week. The 6-day schedule is most appropriate after 12–18 months of consistent training, when full-body routines start producing diminishing returns.

What if I miss a session?
Shift the remaining sessions forward by one day. Missing a Push A session doesn’t mean skipping Push A — it means Push A happens on Wednesday instead of Monday. Don’t try to combine missed sessions into a single longer workout.

Get a 6-Day Schedule Built for Your Goals

The workout generator builds your 6-day plan around your equipment, training level, and specific goal — so you’re not adapting a generic template.

Build My 6-Day Plan →
Dennis Kiplimo
Written by
Dennis Kiplimo

Dennis Kiplimo is a Registered Nurse and founder of Denstar Fitness. He publishes fitness calculators and writes about training, nutrition and health on Medium.

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