[Podcast] How Often Should You Take Your Sets to Fail?

Do you build more muscle mass when you train to failure, versus stopping a few reps short?

In today’s episode, we discuss a new study that examined this. Then we’ll zoom out and debate a lot of different scenarios, to give you a better understanding of when it might matter more if you train to fail, and when it might matter less.

Two common definitions of training to fail are muscular failure (when you can’t lift the weight anymore, no matter what), and technical failure (when you can’t lift the weight anymore with the technique you want to use). Both definitions are legitimate, and regardless of which one you use for your training, we believe you will learn useful information from this episode!

We finish by answering a handful of questions from our listeners on this topic, including:

  • How hard is knowing when you’re 1–2 reps from failure?
  • How does training to fail affect recovery?

Let’s go balls to the wall today!

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This is the seventh episode of the podcast. Check out the other episodes below:

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Resources on How Often to Train to Failure

Read more about the study we discuss:

And check out this comprehensive guide on training to failure:


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Philip Wildenstam

Philip used to be a powerlifter (his best lift was a 275 kg raw squat), but now he mostly eats, drinks, and sleeps. He's also a certified nutrition coach and a co-founder of StrengthLog, and he's always trying to make the app better and more user-friendly. If you ask Philip nicely, he might share his recipe for Swedish meatballs with you.