Want to start Stronglifts but keep working out 5x week

Hi, I'm 5'6, 142lbs, currently doing self designed split routine 5x a week, mon-fri. My goal is to lose body fat and get down to about 130.

I find stronglifts appealing, But I am discouraged by the program being designed for 3 sessions a week only. I Am used to working out 5 days a week and enjoy it a lot. I know the days off are designed for rest, But could I still do some work, Maybe isolation? I don't want to do cardio, as I find it boring (I have knee issues and can only use elliptical on medium settings or treadmills for walking, no impact exercise). I used to do a full hour of elliptical back when I started going gym and have no idea how I got through it.

If you have any experience or any suggestions on what I could do on my days off, I'm all ears:)
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Replies

  • halleymw
    halleymw Posts: 246 Member
    Workouts are designed the way they are for a reason. If you don't do the workout as designed, you are subverting the results that have been obtained by many peoople that have done the program successfully. Right in the faq, he says to do the program as designed. If you add in isolation exercises on off days, your muscles are never going to be able to recover. If the muscles can't recover, they can't grow, you are more prone to injury, and you will stall out on the lifts, then go on the internet and write disparaging remarks, "don't do SL , I tried it and it didn't do anything at all for me." If you HAVE to do something on off days, do HIIT and maybe some Ab work. I would suggest bicycling with HIIT since you have some knee issues. or else swimming.

    You start out slow, so initially you will feel like you are not working out as hard as you could, but the weight piles up quickly. After doing if for a month or so you MIGHT consider doing some body weight exercises, such as pull ups, dips, pushups, but I don't think isolation exercises would be benficiial.
    If you really want a 5 day a week program, I am sure you can find one on bodybuilding.com, such as the ones here:
    http://www.bodybuilding.com/fun/wotw94.htm

    Mike
  • Matt24442
    Matt24442 Posts: 324
    Do stronglifts for the 3 days as prescribed, then the other two days: Do some hiit, go for a run, do some yoga. You'll want the 48 hours in between lifting sessions.
  • The_Enginerd
    The_Enginerd Posts: 3,982 Member
    Recovery is part of the program, so I would not do accessory lifts on off days. That subverts that recovery portion.

    Regarding the above post, I would actually not recommend doing HIIT on your off days. Running, yoga, Pilates, anything else, would be okay.
  • RECowgill
    RECowgill Posts: 881 Member
    If you are doing 5x5 reps at a truly heavy weight for you, you'll need that day off.
  • Matt24442
    Matt24442 Posts: 324
    Recovery is part of the program, so I would not do accessory lifts on off days. That subverts that recovery portion.

    Regarding the above post, I would actually not recommend doing HIIT on your off days. Running, yoga, Pilates, anything else, would be okay.

    Why no hiit?
  • MoreBean13
    MoreBean13 Posts: 8,701 Member
    Don't do isolation or any other lifts in between the stronglifts workouts. If you feel like you CAN do more, you need to up the weight on your SL workouts.

    You can do cardio (non-HIIT, regular cardio) on whatever days off you want.
  • MoreBean13
    MoreBean13 Posts: 8,701 Member
    Recovery is part of the program, so I would not do accessory lifts on off days. That subverts that recovery portion.

    Regarding the above post, I would actually not recommend doing HIIT on your off days. Running, yoga, Pilates, anything else, would be okay.

    Why no hiit?

    If you're truly doing HIIT correctly it taxes the muscles the same as lifting, and requires the same rest time afterwards- so doing it in between is almost the same as lifting again.

    Most people don't really do HIIT when they say they're doing it though. Like if someone says they're doing 30 mins of HIIT, it's not HIIT.
  • MinimalistShoeAddict
    MinimalistShoeAddict Posts: 1,946 Member
    If you are doing 5x5 reps at a truly heavy weight for you, you'll need that day off.

    I agree with this. Both the Stronglifts A and Stronglifts B workout contain squats. I see no way that you could follow the program as designed and recover fully between workouts when squatting 5x5 with heavy weights, five days each week.

    If you are worried about your knees, focus on low impact forms of cardio such as swimming.
  • Matt24442
    Matt24442 Posts: 324
    Recovery is part of the program, so I would not do accessory lifts on off days. That subverts that recovery portion.

    Regarding the above post, I would actually not recommend doing HIIT on your off days. Running, yoga, Pilates, anything else, would be okay.

    Why no hiit?

    If you're truly doing HIIT correctly it taxes the muscles the same as lifting, and requires the same rest time afterwards- so doing it in between is almost the same as lifting again.

    Most people don't really do HIIT when they say they're doing it though. Like if someone says they're doing 30 mins of HIIT, it's not HIIT.


    Sooo what if you lift Monday/Wednesday/Friday, do something Tuesday let's say, then Hiit on Saturday, that works? i realize it's the day after lifting but you have more time to recover until monday.
  • MoreBean13
    MoreBean13 Posts: 8,701 Member
    Recovery is part of the program, so I would not do accessory lifts on off days. That subverts that recovery portion.

    Regarding the above post, I would actually not recommend doing HIIT on your off days. Running, yoga, Pilates, anything else, would be okay.

    Why no hiit?

    If you're truly doing HIIT correctly it taxes the muscles the same as lifting, and requires the same rest time afterwards- so doing it in between is almost the same as lifting again.

    Most people don't really do HIIT when they say they're doing it though. Like if someone says they're doing 30 mins of HIIT, it's not HIIT.


    Sooo what if you lift Monday/Wednesday/Friday, do something Tuesday let's say, then Hiit on Saturday, that works? i realize it's the day after lifting but you have more time to recover until monday.

    You can try and see how it feels- I would probably stack the HIIT right after my workout Friday and take the whole weekend or do cardio saturday but you can try it and see.
  • Matt24442
    Matt24442 Posts: 324
    Recovery is part of the program, so I would not do accessory lifts on off days. That subverts that recovery portion.

    Regarding the above post, I would actually not recommend doing HIIT on your off days. Running, yoga, Pilates, anything else, would be okay.

    Why no hiit?

    If you're truly doing HIIT correctly it taxes the muscles the same as lifting, and requires the same rest time afterwards- so doing it in between is almost the same as lifting again.

    Most people don't really do HIIT when they say they're doing it though. Like if someone says they're doing 30 mins of HIIT, it's not HIIT.


    Sooo what if you lift Monday/Wednesday/Friday, do something Tuesday let's say, then Hiit on Saturday, that works? i realize it's the day after lifting but you have more time to recover until monday.

    You can try and see how it feels- I would probably stack the HIIT right after my workout Friday and take the whole weekend or do cardio saturday but you can try it and see.

    well typically Ill do hiit on tuesdays and saturdays, Im doing jason blaha's 5 x5 program, but on rest days (tuesday and thursday) i feel fine and on lifting days too. I do not think it\s really affected my lifting. Sorry for wrong info, OP.
  • The_Enginerd
    The_Enginerd Posts: 3,982 Member
    Recovery is part of the program, so I would not do accessory lifts on off days. That subverts that recovery portion.

    Regarding the above post, I would actually not recommend doing HIIT on your off days. Running, yoga, Pilates, anything else, would be okay.

    Why no hiit?

    If you're truly doing HIIT correctly it taxes the muscles the same as lifting, and requires the same rest time afterwards- so doing it in between is almost the same as lifting again.

    Most people don't really do HIIT when they say they're doing it though. Like if someone says they're doing 30 mins of HIIT, it's not HIIT.


    Sooo what if you lift Monday/Wednesday/Friday, do something Tuesday let's say, then Hiit on Saturday, that works? i realize it's the day after lifting but you have more time to recover until monday.
    If you wanted to do HIIT too, do HIIT on the same day as your lifting, and let the recovery day be a recovery day.
    That's what I've seen recommended, but I do not do HIIT, so maybe someone can back me up or correct me.
  • AJ_G
    AJ_G Posts: 4,158 Member
    If you are doing 5x5 reps at a truly heavy weight for you, you'll need that day off.

    I agree with this. Both the Stronglifts A and Stronglifts B workout contain squats. I see no way that you could follow the program as designed and recover fully between workouts when squatting 5x5 with heavy weights, five days each week.

    If you are worried about your knees, focus on low impact forms of cardio such as swimming.

    This is my main beef with Stronglifts, that it has squats every lifting day. I get that it keeps it simple with heavy compounds, but a traditional body part split makes soooo much more sense. If you do a 3, 4, or 5 day split where each day is a separate muscle group, then that muscle group has much more time to recover before it has to be worked out again meaning you can hit that muscle group as hard as possible and not have to worry about hitting it again in 2 days...
  • MoreBean13
    MoreBean13 Posts: 8,701 Member
    If you are doing 5x5 reps at a truly heavy weight for you, you'll need that day off.

    I agree with this. Both the Stronglifts A and Stronglifts B workout contain squats. I see no way that you could follow the program as designed and recover fully between workouts when squatting 5x5 with heavy weights, five days each week.

    If you are worried about your knees, focus on low impact forms of cardio such as swimming.

    This is my main beef with Stronglifts, that it has squats every lifting day. I get that it keeps it simple with heavy compounds, but a traditional body part split makes soooo much more sense. If you do a 3, 4, or 5 day split where each day is a separate muscle group, then that muscle group has much more time to recover before it has to be worked out again meaning you can hit that muscle group as hard as possible and not have to worry about hitting it again in 2 days...

    The format of SL works really well though for people who are relatively new to lifting- the squats every workout are ok when you're not lifting THAT much weight- your legs can handle it. I think pretty much everyone serious will come to a point where they can't make forward progress anymore without splitting it up, but it's really good until you stall out. It's soooo much more simple than other splits. I was successful at it for probably a year (though I will always argue that chin ups or pull ups need to be in that program)
  • Matt24442
    Matt24442 Posts: 324
    Recovery is part of the program, so I would not do accessory lifts on off days. That subverts that recovery portion.

    Regarding the above post, I would actually not recommend doing HIIT on your off days. Running, yoga, Pilates, anything else, would be okay.

    Why no hiit?

    If you're truly doing HIIT correctly it taxes the muscles the same as lifting, and requires the same rest time afterwards- so doing it in between is almost the same as lifting again.

    Most people don't really do HIIT when they say they're doing it though. Like if someone says they're doing 30 mins of HIIT, it's not HIIT.


    Sooo what if you lift Monday/Wednesday/Friday, do something Tuesday let's say, then Hiit on Saturday, that works? i realize it's the day after lifting but you have more time to recover until monday.
    If you wanted to do HIIT too, do HIIT on the same day as your lifting, and let the recovery day be a recovery day.
    That's what I've seen recommended, but I do not do HIIT, so maybe someone can back me up or correct me.

    Ive heard that too, but ive also seen: lift 3 days a week, hiit twice for the best results of fat loss. Though I don't do hiit on lift days because blaha's 5 x5, which is essentially stronglifts with accessory work, takes about 70-80 minutes to complete and i am pretty gassed afterwards. So usually i just leave it for the day after. But i do want to know too now.
  • RECowgill
    RECowgill Posts: 881 Member
    The format of SL works really well though for people who are relatively new to lifting- the squats every workout are ok when you're not lifting THAT much weight- your legs can handle it. I think pretty much everyone serious will come to a point where they can't make forward progress anymore without splitting it up, but it's really good until you stall out. It's soooo much more simple than other splits. I was successful at it for probably a year (though I will always argue that chin ups or pull ups need to be in that program)

    See I actually completely disagree with this, the structure of stronglifts 5x5 lends itself more to a moderate-advanced program, for the following reasons:

    • Compound work is generally not for newbies, that's isolation work on machines. Compounds require nuances and an understanding of proper form.
    • Heavy compound work requires even more advanced knowledge. Form has to be perfect to avoid injury. You have to have experience and confidence to know your limits. This reason alone makes it at least a moderately advanced workout.
    • Simplicity of the routine does not equal newbie friendly, the simplicity is deceptively hard. It does require discipline to follow it exactly and an advanced understanding of the importance of rest/recovery to not modify it, as we've seen in this thread.
    • I think a person can disagree with squat frequency but the program makes the argument this is the most important exercise and people can handle the frequency/progression. This may just be a philosophical difference but does not indicate the routine is less advanced.
  • I used to do the StrongLifts program it was a godsend it ramped by Deadlift, Squat and Bench Press to over 300lbs each in a matter of months. But I didn't ONLY do StongLifts, cause i felt like I'd be short changing myself if j didn't go hard in the gym for the majority of the week (4 to 5 days). So if you want to go the gym more than the 3 days the program says you should go ahead, just make sure you give 100% everyday you hit the gym. I'd recommend doing exercises that compliment the stronglifts stuff on the other days: CrossFit WODs are good short workouts that make sure you don't burnout the next day.
  • Totally disagree with all that nonsense about StrongLifts being for intermediate to advanced trainers, it's a program that works for EVERYONE from the DAY 1 Beginner to the GYM IS MY LIFE Gym Bunny. It's one of the best programs for getting stronger no matter what level you are.

    To say that compound exercises are for experienced lifters is just proof of how ignorant you are to the basics of weight-lifting, Compound Exercises are the bread and butter of weight-lifting, they are the foundation of any workout program, and a must for beginners and experienced lifters alike.
  • jackr88
    jackr88 Posts: 13
    Recovery is part of the program, so I would not do accessory lifts on off days. That subverts that recovery portion.

    Regarding the above post, I would actually not recommend doing HIIT on your off days. Running, yoga, Pilates, anything else, would be okay.

    Why no hiit?

    If you're truly doing HIIT correctly it taxes the muscles the same as lifting, and requires the same rest time afterwards- so doing it in between is almost the same as lifting again.

    Most people don't really do HIIT when they say they're doing it though. Like if someone says they're doing 30 mins of HIIT, it's not HIIT.


    Sooo what if you lift Monday/Wednesday/Friday, do something Tuesday let's say, then Hiit on Saturday, that works? i realize it's the day after lifting but you have more time to recover until monday.

    You can try and see how it feels- I would probably stack the HIIT right after my workout Friday and take the whole weekend or do cardio saturday but you can try it and see.

    well typically Ill do hiit on tuesdays and saturdays, Im doing jason blaha's 5 x5 program, but on rest days (tuesday and thursday) i feel fine and on lifting days too. I do not think it\s really affected my lifting. Sorry for wrong info, OP.

    If you are doing the ICF / JFTV 5x5 created by Jason and can still lift in between - I would suggest you are not doing the workout correctly either in regards to volume (not doing 5 full working sets as well as warm ups) or you're simply not lifting heavy enough.
  • ell_v131
    ell_v131 Posts: 349 Member
    Thanks guys, I appreciate all the answers!

    It is pretty much what I thought, will have to treat the rest days as such, but the swimming is not a bad idea. Unfortunately I can't handle bike, but swimming could be great!

    I will think about doing strong lifts some more as I really want to work out 5 days a week and if I can't, this may not be the program for me like one poster said.

    All the feedback has been very useful, thank you!
  • pcastagner
    pcastagner Posts: 1,606 Member
    Hi, I'm 5'6, 142lbs, currently doing self designed split routine 5x a week, mon-fri. My goal is to lose body fat and get down to about 130.

    I find stronglifts appealing, But I am discouraged by the program being designed for 3 sessions a week only. I Am used to working out 5 days a week and enjoy it a lot. I know the days off are designed for rest, But could I still do some work, Maybe isolation? I don't want to do cardio, as I find it boring (I have knee issues and can only use elliptical on medium settings or treadmills for walking, no impact exercise). I used to do a full hour of elliptical back when I started going gym and have no idea how I got through it.

    If you have any experience or any suggestions on what I could do on my days off, I'm all ears:)

    set your program according to your goals, THEN figure out how to handle it emotionally. I've made this mistake, and I think lots of otherwise smart people often make this mistake: training too frequently when the goal is weight loss. It's taken me a year of KNOWING I should train less when I eat less to actually do it, so I'm not saying this is easy. but if you want the best results possible you just gotta do it.

    but to keep you busy, you could add some jump rope once a week, yoga once a week, and mobility work once a week. There you go six days of something to do, one day off.

    This is definitely one of those "don't do what I did if you can help it" replies.
  • pcastagner
    pcastagner Posts: 1,606 Member
    The format of SL works really well though for people who are relatively new to lifting- the squats every workout are ok when you're not lifting THAT much weight- your legs can handle it. I think pretty much everyone serious will come to a point where they can't make forward progress anymore without splitting it up, but it's really good until you stall out. It's soooo much more simple than other splits. I was successful at it for probably a year (though I will always argue that chin ups or pull ups need to be in that program)

    See I actually completely disagree with this, the structure of stronglifts 5x5 lends itself more to a moderate-advanced program, for the following reasons:

    • Compound work is generally not for newbies, that's isolation work on machines. Compounds require nuances and an understanding of proper form.
    • Heavy compound work requires even more advanced knowledge. Form has to be perfect to avoid injury. You have to have experience and confidence to know your limits. This reason alone makes it at least a moderately advanced workout.
    • Simplicity of the routine does not equal newbie friendly, the simplicity is deceptively hard. It does require discipline to follow it exactly and an advanced understanding of the importance of rest/recovery to not modify it, as we've seen in this thread.
    • I think a person can disagree with squat frequency but the program makes the argument this is the most important exercise and people can handle the frequency/progression. This may just be a philosophical difference but does not indicate the routine is less advanced.

    wow. just... no!

    I really wish I had started with a dedication to learning compound lifts instead of waiting so long. If you have a bit of kinesthetic sense and moderate intelligence, you should be able to read the book, take it to the gym with a buddy, and get your lifts good enough to avoid injury.

    what you say is basically ludicrous on its face. if compound lifts require more advanced knowledge (I think you meant skill), you START with them. THAT is how you acquire experience and knowledge. You learn a movement pattern by doing it, not by wasting your time on freaking machines. Starting on machines would simply back up ignorance with muscle, and set you up for injury when you finally decide you are ready for real lifting.
  • jimmmer
    jimmmer Posts: 3,515 Member
    If you want to lift 5 days a week, don't do Stronglifts.

    Find a 5-day split and do that instead (you could do a body part split or something with mixed-qualities training like PHAT). Or do an upper/lower 4 day split with a day of mobility/yoga/swimming (I'm thinking something like 5/3/1, for example).

    You'll progress faster doing Stronglifts, but you've got to weigh that against what you'll enjoy/what you'll stick with.

    Sometimes the heart wants what it wants.
  • journey_man
    journey_man Posts: 110 Member
    See I actually completely disagree with this, the structure of stronglifts 5x5 lends itself more to a moderate-advanced program, for the following reasons:

    Compound work is generally not for newbies, that's isolation work on machines. Compounds require nuances and an understanding of proper form.
    • Heavy compound work requires even more advanced knowledge. Form has to be perfect to avoid injury. You have to have experience and confidence to know your limits. This reason alone makes it at least a moderately advanced workout.
    • Simplicity of the routine does not equal newbie friendly, the simplicity is deceptively hard. It does require discipline to follow it exactly and an advanced understanding of the importance of rest/recovery to not modify it, as we've seen in this thread.
    • I think a person can disagree with squat frequency but the program makes the argument this is the most important exercise and people can handle the frequency/progression. This may just be a philosophical difference but does not indicate the routine is less advanced.

    Please. You are weirdly fetishizing the non-existing complexity of compound work. I've lifted on and off for years. It's reeeally not that difficult. In fact, I think the opposite is true: that compound work is actually best for newbies, and that they should start right away. I hope none are put off by the above!
  • patrickblo13
    patrickblo13 Posts: 831 Member
    I am currently in week 6 of 5x5. I love it. I started with the bar for most the lifts except DL and squats. As far as additional workouts, I stick with the schedule but I do a HIIT workout at the end of my session (usually 1 or 2 circuits). For now I am good with it but I am listening to my body. As the weight gets heavier I may not be able to. I like the program in that you say measure results. I probably won't stick with the program forever but it is a great way to build a base.
  • jmg000
    jmg000 Posts: 16 Member
    See I actually completely disagree with this, the structure of stronglifts 5x5 lends itself more to a moderate-advanced program, for the following reasons:

    • Compound work is generally not for newbies, that's isolation work on machines. Compounds require nuances and an understanding of proper form.
    • Heavy compound work requires even more advanced knowledge. Form has to be perfect to avoid injury. You have to have experience and confidence to know your limits. This reason alone makes it at least a moderately advanced workout.
    • Simplicity of the routine does not equal newbie friendly, the simplicity is deceptively hard. It does require discipline to follow it exactly and an advanced understanding of the importance of rest/recovery to not modify it, as we've seen in this thread.
    • I think a person can disagree with squat frequency but the program makes the argument this is the most important exercise and people can handle the frequency/progression. This may just be a philosophical difference but does not indicate the routine is less advanced.

    I have to strongly disagree with your view that this is a "moderate-advanced program". This is not even close to an advanced program. This has very few training variables with rapid linear progression, which is sensible for a NOVICE trainee who can adapt to training bouts in 48-72 hours (based on our general knowledge of comprehensive recovery systems). An Advanced trainee, will have years of experience and will require complex, undulating programs, which would look very different from a SL-type of program. You will never see an advanced/elite lifter using a program like this unless they are coming back from a layoff or injury, in which they could use simple linear programming to get back into training shape.
  • jmg000
    jmg000 Posts: 16 Member
    deleted
  • FrnkLft
    FrnkLft Posts: 1,821 Member
    The most you could reasonably dois break it up into upper/lower days.

    Day 1: Squat (5x5), Deadlift (1x5), Abs
    Day 2: OHP (5x5), Row (5x5), Bench (5x5)
    Day 3: Squat (5x5), Deadlift Variant (light, 3x10), Abs
    Day 4: OHP (5x5), Row (5x5), Bench (5x5)

    The only thing you loose is Squating 3x week, in favor of twice. Which is fine actually, and you're getting more volume in week after week. You're hitting everything 4x per 2 week period, vs 3x with the standard SL5x5.
  • FrnkLft
    FrnkLft Posts: 1,821 Member
    See I actually completely disagree with this, the structure of stronglifts 5x5 lends itself more to a moderate-advanced program, for the following reasons:

    • Compound work is generally not for newbies, that's isolation work on machines. Compounds require nuances and an understanding of proper form.
    • Heavy compound work requires even more advanced knowledge. Form has to be perfect to avoid injury. You have to have experience and confidence to know your limits. This reason alone makes it at least a moderately advanced workout.
    • Simplicity of the routine does not equal newbie friendly, the simplicity is deceptively hard. It does require discipline to follow it exactly and an advanced understanding of the importance of rest/recovery to not modify it, as we've seen in this thread.
    • I think a person can disagree with squat frequency but the program makes the argument this is the most important exercise and people can handle the frequency/progression. This may just be a philosophical difference but does not indicate the routine is less advanced.

    I don't find the compound lifts to be all that dangerous, provided you start light (in most cases with the bar), and have the maturity to watch/read about proper form (of which there are good resources on the SL 5x5 site).

    Can't live life with the emergency brake on. Just start light and pay attention.
  • FindingMyPerfection
    FindingMyPerfection Posts: 702 Member
    Thanks guys, I appreciate all the answers!

    It is pretty much what I thought, will have to treat the rest days as such, but the swimming is not a bad idea. Unfortunately I can't handle bike, but swimming could be great!

    I will think about doing strong lifts some more as I really want to work out 5 days a week and if I can't, this may not be the program for me like one poster said.

    All the feedback has been very useful, thank you!
    The rowing machine is also an option for your rest days.