New client keeps rushing through sets and wondering why their lifts are not improving. You need specific rest times based on their goal and the physiological reason before the next session.
Hypertrophy: 1–3 min (metabolic stress + muscle damage)
Endurance: 30–90s (maintains elevated HR)
Power: 3–8 min (full neural recovery for maximal output)
1 What this calculator does
Recommends rest period duration between sets based on training goal (strength, hypertrophy, muscular endurance, power) and relative intensity. Uses evidence-based guidelines from NSCA and sports science research.
2 Formula & professional reasoning
Rest period recommendations by goal and intensity:
Strength (1-5 reps): Heavy 3-5 min | Moderate 2-3 min | Light 1.5-2 min
Hypertrophy (6-12 reps): Heavy 2-3 min | Moderate 1-2 min | Light 30-90 sec
Muscular endurance: Heavy 1-2 min | Moderate 30-60 sec | Light 15-30 sec
Power/explosive: Heavy 4-8 min | Moderate 3-5 min | Light 2-3 min
Rest period duration determines recovery of the phosphocreatine (PCr) energy system. Full PCr resynthesis takes approximately 3-5 minutes -- important for maximal strength and power. Shorter rest (1-2 min) creates metabolic stress associated with hypertrophy. Very short rest (<30 sec) maximises endurance adaptations. The rest period is one of the most under-appreciated variables in resistance training program design.
3 Worked examples
⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.
NSCA hypertrophy moderate protocolHeavy strength requires full PCr recoveryMaximal neural output requires most complete recovery4 Sanity check
5 Common errors
| Error | Cause | Consequence | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Too short rest for strength work | Trying to keep heart rate elevated during a strength session | PCr not fully replenished -- subsequent sets at 80-90% of strength potential, limiting stimulus | For heavy compound strength work (>80% 1RM), rest at least 3 minutes between sets. Heart rate will decrease -- this is appropriate for strength training. |
| Not using a timer to enforce rest periods | Estimating rest by feel | Actual rest 30-50% less than prescribed -- inconsistent recovery | Always use a timer (phone stopwatch, gym timer). Trained athletes consistently underestimate their rest time by feel. |
| Same rest period for all exercises | Following a single rest protocol for an entire workout | Under-recovering on heavy compounds, over-resting on isolation work | Adjust rest to the exercise and intensity: 3-5 min for heavy squats and deadlifts, 1-2 min for isolation exercises. |
| Confusing inter-set rest with inter-session recovery | Thinking shorter rest between exercises also means training daily | Overtraining -- insufficient time for muscle protein synthesis between sessions | Inter-set rest and inter-session recovery are separate. Each muscle group needs 48-72 hours between training sessions. |
6 Reference & regulatory links
7 Professional workflow
Common tools used alongside this one: