Push/Pull/Legs Split

    Push/pull/legs (PPL) is a training split that divides workouts into pushing muscles, pulling muscles, and legs, typically across three or six days.

    Key facts

    • Push: chest, shoulders, triceps.
    • Pull: back and biceps.
    • Legs: quads, hamstrings, glutes, calves.
    • Run 3 or 6 days per week for different frequencies.

    PPL groups exercises by their movement pattern. Push day trains the muscles that press (chest, shoulders, triceps); pull day trains the muscles that pull (back and biceps); leg day covers the lower body. Grouping this way keeps related muscles together and avoids overlap between sessions.

    Run once through per week (3 days), it trains each muscle once; run twice through (6 days), it trains each muscle twice a week, a frequency many find effective for growth. It's a flexible, popular structure that scales from beginner to advanced depending on how often you run it.

    Frequently asked questions

    Is push/pull/legs good for building muscle?

    Yes. It's a well-structured split that groups muscles logically and, run 6 days a week, trains each muscle twice — a frequency that suits muscle growth.

    How many days a week is PPL?

    Commonly 3 or 6. Three days trains each muscle once per week; six days runs the cycle twice for higher frequency.

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