PHAT Workout Program

Origin & Philosophy

Created by Dr. Layne Norton - PhD in Nutritional Sciences, pro natural bodybuilder (IFPA/NGA), and competitive powerlifter. Norton developed PHAT after realizing that pure bodybuilding splits weren't maximizing his growth potential. The core insight: training each muscle group with both heavy/explosive work and high-volume hypertrophy work in the same week produces better results than either approach alone.

Norton drew on research showing muscle protein synthesis stays elevated for about 48 hours after training - meaning hitting each muscle group twice per week captures more growth windows than a traditional once-per-week bro split. He combined this with concepts from conjugate training (speed work, exercise rotation) to create a program that builds both strength and size simultaneously.

The program was originally published on SimplyShredded in 2011 and later updated on Norton's own site Biolayne.

Who It's For

  • Experience level: Intermediate to advanced (1+ years of consistent training). You need solid form on compound movements and enough training base to recover from 5 high-volume sessions per week.
  • Prerequisites: Comfortable with Squat, Bench Press, Dumbbell, Bent Over Row, and Overhead Press, Dumbbell at heavy weights. You should understand RPE and training to failure.
  • Primary goal: Simultaneous strength and hypertrophy ("powerbuilding").
  • Best suited for: Bulking or aggressive maintenance. Multiple sources and user reviews confirm that cutting on PHAT is rough due to the volume - consider PHUL (4-day version with lower volume) if you're in a deficit.

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Each muscle group trained twice per week with different stimuli - heavy power work builds strength, hypertrophy work adds volume for growth
  • Speed work (6x3 explosive reps) on hypertrophy days develops power and teaches your nervous system to recruit more muscle fibers, which transfers to heavier lifts on power days
  • Speed work weight is automatically derived from power day weight (65%), so it scales as you get stronger
  • Covers a wide rep range (3-20) across the week, targeting both mechanical tension and metabolic stress
  • Direct arm work on every upper body day - unlike many powerlifting-oriented programs, PHAT doesn't neglect biceps and triceps

Cons

  • 5 sessions per week averaging 55-80 minutes each is a significant time commitment - hypertrophy days have 8-10 exercises and 24-28 working sets
  • Recovery is demanding, especially for legs - Squat appears twice per week (power + speed work) plus Hack Squat, Leg Press, and Leg Extension add up fast
  • No conventional deadlift in the base program - only Stiff Leg Deadlift as an assistance movement on Lower Power day
  • Speed work is hard to self-regulate without a coach - many lifters go too heavy (defeating the purpose of explosive bar speed)
  • No programmed deload or failure protocol - you need experience to know when to back off
  • No direct ab or rear delt work

Program Structure

  • Split: Upper/Lower power days, then three focused hypertrophy days (Back/Shoulders, Lower Body, Chest/Arms)
  • Periodization: Non-linear (daily undulating). Heavy low-rep work and lighter high-rep work occur in the same week for each muscle group.
  • Schedule: Fixed weekly - Upper Power, Lower Power, Rest, Back/Shoulders Hypertrophy, Lower Hypertrophy, Chest/Arms Hypertrophy, Rest. The midweek rest day separates the power and hypertrophy blocks.
  • Key feature: Each hypertrophy day opens with "speed work" - 6 sets of 3 explosive reps using the same compound from the power day. The weight is automatically set to 65% of your current power day weight. Focus on moving the bar as fast as possible through the concentric phase.

Exercise Selection & Rationale

Norton organizes exercises into categories based on their role in the program.

Power movements (3-5 reps) are the heaviest lifts of the week. Bent Over Row drives back thickness. Bench Press, Dumbbell builds pressing strength - Norton prefers dumbbell bench for the power movement because it demands more stabilization and trains each side independently. Squat is the core lower body power lift.

Assistance movements (6-10 reps) support the power lifts. Pull Up and Chin Up add back width with different grip angles. Chest Dip provides pressing volume without the same shoulder stress as benching. Overhead Press, Dumbbell develops shoulders that carry over to bench pressing. Hack Squat adds quad volume after heavy Squats. Stiff Leg Deadlift hits the posterior chain without the CNS demand of conventional deadlifts.

Speed work is the signature PHAT element. The same Bent Over Row, Squat, and Bench Press, Dumbbell from the power days reappear on their respective hypertrophy days for 6 sets of 3 explosive reps at 65% of the power day weight. This bridges the gap between power and hypertrophy days - the weight automatically adjusts as your power day lifts increase.

Hypertrophy work spans multiple rep ranges (8-12, 12-15, 15-20) to hit different fiber types. Norton prescribes higher reps (15-20) for finishing movements like Kneeling Pulldown, Incline Curl, and Cable Kickback - these are pump-focused exercises where metabolic stress matters more than load.

Substitution options: Bent Over Row can swap for Pendlay Row or T Bar Row. Pull Up can swap for Lat Pulldown. Hack Squat can swap for Bulgarian Split Squat or Front Squat. Chest Press, Leverage Machine can swap for Bench Press Close Grip. Norton recommends rotating power movements every 2-3 weeks to prevent accommodation.

Set & Rep Scheme

  • Power day compounds (Bent Over Row, Bench Press, Dumbbell, Squat, Stiff Leg Deadlift): 3 sets of 3-5 reps. These are the heaviest work of the week - keep 1-2 reps in reserve.
  • Power day assistance (Pull Up, Chin Up, Chest Dip, Hack Squat, Overhead Press, Dumbbell): 2-3 sets of 6-10 reps. Moderate to heavy weight, still focused on progressive overload.
  • Power day auxiliary (Bicep Curl, EZ Bar, Skullcrusher, Standing Calf Raise): 2-3 sets of 6-10 reps.
  • Speed work (Bent Over Row, Squat, Bench Press, Dumbbell): 6 sets of 3 reps at 65% of power day weight. Move the bar explosively through the concentric phase.
  • Hypertrophy compounds (8-12 reps): Controlled tempo, full range of motion.
  • Hypertrophy isolation - mid range (12-15 reps): Moderate weight, focus on mind-muscle connection.
  • Hypertrophy isolation - high range (15-20 reps): Light weight, chase the pump.

Norton stresses: for the first 2-4 weeks, do NOT train to failure. Let your body adapt to the volume and frequency. After the adaptation period, only take the last 1-2 sets of each exercise to failure.

Progressive Overload

Power exercises use double progression with a 3-5 rep range. When you hit 5 reps on all sets, weight goes up by 5lb and reps reset to 3. Bent Over Row goes 3x3 -> 3x4 -> 3x5, then add 5lb and reset to 3x3. If you can't complete the target reps, the weight and reps stay the same - try again next session.

Speed work weight is automatically derived - always 65% of whatever your power day weight currently is. As your power day Squat goes from 185lb to 190lb, speed squats automatically move from 120lb to 124lb. You don't need to manage speed work progression separately.

Hypertrophy exercises use double progression within their respective rep ranges. Lat Pulldown goes 3x8 -> 3x9 -> ... -> 3x12, then add 5lb and reset to 3x8. Wider ranges like Lateral Raise (12-20) give more room before weight increases, which suits smaller muscle groups.

Stalling: If you can't progress for 2-3 sessions, reduce weight by 10% and build back up. Norton recommends a full deload week (60-70% of normal weights) every 6-12 weeks.

How Long to Run It / What Next

Run PHAT for 12-16 weeks before reassessing. The first 2-4 weeks will feel brutal as your body adapts to the volume - Norton says this is normal. You should feel adapted and hitting PRs by week 4-6.

Signs it's time to move on: Stalling on most exercises despite deloading, persistent joint pain, or inability to recover between sessions. If recovery is the bottleneck, drop down to PHUL for lower volume, or switch to a 5/3/1 variant for a strength-focused block.

Equipment Needed

As written, the program uses a barbell, dumbbells, an EZ curl bar, cable machines, and several machines (hack squat, leg press, leg curl, leg extension, chest press, calf raise).

Home gym substitutions:

  • Hack Squat -> Bulgarian Split Squat or Front Squat
  • Leg Press -> Front Squat or Goblet Squat
  • Leg Extension -> Bulgarian Split Squat or Lunge
  • Lying Leg Curl / Seated Leg Curl -> Romanian Deadlift, Barbell or Good Morning
  • Chest Press, Leverage Machine -> Bench Press Close Grip
  • Lat Pulldown / Kneeling Pulldown -> Pull Up or Chin Up
  • Seated Row -> Bent Over Row, Dumbbell
  • Incline Chest Fly, Cable -> Incline Chest Fly
  • Triceps Pushdown -> Skullcrusher or Triceps Dip
  • Cable Kickback -> Triceps Extension
  • Calf Press on Leg Press / Standing Calf Raise, Leverage Machine -> Standing Calf Raise

Rest Times

  • Power day main compounds (Bent Over Row, Bench Press, Dumbbell, Squat, Stiff Leg Deadlift): 3 minutes. Norton says up to 5-6 minutes is fine for the heaviest sets - "the purpose of these workouts is to move maximum weight."
  • Power day assistance/auxiliary: 2 minutes.
  • Speed work: 90 seconds. Norton says no longer than 90 seconds - long enough to maintain bar speed, short enough to keep the session moving.
  • Hypertrophy compounds (8-12 reps): 90 seconds.
  • Hypertrophy isolation (12-20 reps): 60 seconds.

How to Pick Starting Weights

Power day compounds: Pick a weight you can do for 5 clean reps with 1-2 reps in reserve. Don't try to hit PRs on day one - the first 2-4 weeks are about adapting to the volume.

Speed work: You don't need to calculate this - the app automatically sets speed work weight to 65% of your power day weight. Just make sure your power day starting weight is accurate.

Hypertrophy exercises: Pick a weight you can do for the top of the rep range with 2-3 reps in reserve. Double progression will bring you up to the right working weight within a couple weeks.

Common mistake: Starting too heavy across the board. The first few weeks will feel miserable regardless due to volume adaptation. Starting heavy on top of that leads to burnout.

Common Modifications

  • Add conventional deadlifts: The base program only has Stiff Leg Deadlift. Swap for conventional Deadlift on power day, or add deadlifts as a separate movement.
  • Swap day order: Move Chest/Arms Hypertrophy before Back/Shoulders Hypertrophy so chest gets 3 days rest before Upper Power instead of 1.
  • Replace speed work with 4x8-10: Norton's own updated version changes the 6x3 speed sets to 4 sets of 8-10 reps at about 70% of power day weight. More hypertrophy volume, still emphasizing explosive intent.
  • Add face pulls: No direct rear delt work in the base program. Add Face Pull at the end of upper body days.
  • Add ab work: Hanging Leg Raise or Cable Crunch at the end of lower body days.
  • Supersets on hypertrophy days: To cut sessions from 90+ minutes, superset non-competing exercises (e.g., Preacher Curl, EZ Bar with Triceps Extension).
  • Rotate power movements: Norton recommends changing power exercises every 2-3 weeks. Swap Squat for Front Squat or Box Squat, Bent Over Row for Pendlay Row, Bench Press, Dumbbell for Bench Press.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is PHAT good for beginners?

No. PHAT is designed for intermediate to advanced lifters with at least 1-2 years of consistent training. The 5-day schedule with 22-28 working sets per session demands substantial recovery capacity. Beginners would progress faster on a simpler program like GZCLP or the Basic Beginner routine.

How many days a week is PHAT?

PHAT is a 5-day program: Upper Power, Lower Power, rest, Back/Shoulders Hypertrophy, Lower Hypertrophy, Chest/Arms Hypertrophy, rest. The midweek rest day separates the power and hypertrophy blocks for recovery.

What is speed work in PHAT?

Speed work is the first exercise on each hypertrophy day - 6 sets of 3 explosive reps using the same exercise from your power day at 65% of the power day weight. The goal is to move the bar as fast as possible during the concentric phase, training your nervous system to recruit muscle fibers more efficiently. The weight updates automatically as your power day lifts increase.

Can I do PHAT while cutting?

You can, but it's not ideal. The high volume demands significant recovery, which suffers in a caloric deficit. Consider reducing sets by 20-30% or switching to PHUL - the same power/hypertrophy concept in 4 days with less volume.

What's the difference between PHAT and PHUL?

Both combine power and hypertrophy training. PHAT is 5 days with separate hypertrophy days for back/shoulders, lower body, and chest/arms, plus signature speed work. PHUL is 4 days with upper power, lower power, upper hypertrophy, lower hypertrophy. Choose PHAT for maximum volume if you have 5 days; choose PHUL for a more manageable workload.

Does PHAT include deadlifts?

The base program has Stiff Leg Deadlifts as assistance on Lower Power day and Romanian Deadlifts on Lower Hypertrophy day, but no conventional deadlifts. Many lifters swap stiff-leg deads for conventional deadlifts or add them as a separate power movement.

How long should PHAT workouts take?

Power days typically run 55-65 minutes with 3-minute rest on heavy sets. Hypertrophy days run 65-80 minutes due to 8-10 exercises with shorter rest. Supersetting non-competing exercises on hypertrophy days can cut 15-20 minutes off session time.

When should I deload on PHAT?

Every 6-12 weeks, reduce all weights to 60-70% of normal for 1 week. Signs you need a deload sooner: persistent fatigue, stalling on multiple exercises, joint pain, or poor sleep. The first 2-4 weeks of PHAT will feel rough regardless - that's normal adaptation, not a sign to deload.

~60-90 min per workout
5x/week, 7-10 exercises per day
Barbell, Dumbbell, EZ Bar, Leverage Machine, Cable, Band
Total Sets: 118
Strength Sets: 56, 47%
Hypertrophy Sets: 62, 53%
Upper Sets: 73 (33s, 40h), 3d
Lower Sets: 45 (23s, 22h), 2d
Core Sets: 0
Push Sets: 38 (17s, 21h), 3d
Pull Sets: 35 (16s, 19h), 3d
Legs Sets: 45 (23s, 22h), 2d
Shoulders: 32↓ (15s, 17h), 3d
Triceps: 23↓ (10s, 13h), 3d
Back: 34↓ (19s, 16h), 4d
Abs: 0↑
Glutes: 13↓ (7s, 6h), 2d
Hamstrings: 17↓ (9s, 8h), 2d
Quadriceps: 24↓ (14s, 10h), 2d
Chest: 34↓ (18s, 16h), 3d
Biceps: 24↓ (10s, 14h), 3d
Calves: 23↓ (12s, 12h), 2d
Forearms: 18↓ (8s, 10h), 3d

Upper Power

Bent Over Row
Barbell
3 × 3 × 115lb
Pull Up
Bodyweight
2 × 6 × 0lb
Chin Up
Bodyweight
2 × 6 × 0lb
Bench Press
Dumbbell
3 × 3 × 40lb
Chest Dip
Bodyweight
2 × 6 × 0lb
Overhead Press
Dumbbell
3 × 6 × 25lb
Bicep Curl
EZ Bar
3 × 6 × 45lb
Skullcrusher
EZ Bar
3 × 6 × 25lb

Lower Power

Squat
Barbell
3 × 3 × 185lb
Hack Squat
Barbell
2 × 6 × 135lb
Leg Extension
Leverage Machine
2 × 6 × 80lb
Stiff Leg Deadlift
Barbell
3 × 5 × 135lb
Lying Leg Curl
Leverage Machine
2 × 6 × 60lb
Standing Calf Raise
Dumbbell
3 × 6 × 100lb
Seated Calf Raise
Barbell
2 × 6 × 70lb

Back and Shoulders Hypertrophy

Bent Over Row
Barbell
6 × 3 × 72.5lb
Lat Pulldown
Cable
3 × 8 × 100lb
Seated Row
Cable
3 × 8 × 100lb
Bent Over One Arm Row
Dumbbell
2 × 12 × 30lb
Kneeling Pulldown
Band
2 × 15 × 60lb
Overhead Press
Dumbbell
3 × 8 × 20lb
Upright Row
Barbell
2 × 12 × 45lb
Lateral Raise
Dumbbell
3 × 12 × 15lb

Lower Hypertrophy

Squat
Barbell
6 × 3 × 120lb
Hack Squat
Barbell
3 × 8 × 135lb
Leg Press
Leverage Machine
2 × 12 × 200lb
Leg Extension
Leverage Machine
3 × 15 × 80lb
Romanian Deadlift
Barbell
3 × 8 × 95lb
Lying Leg Curl
Leverage Machine
2 × 12 × 60lb
Seated Leg Curl
Leverage Machine
2 × 15 × 50lb
Calf Press on Leg Press
Leverage Machine
4 × 10 × 150lb
Seated Calf Raise
Barbell
3 × 15 × 70lb

Chest and Arms Hypertrophy

Bench Press
Dumbbell
6 × 3 × 25lb
Incline Bench Press
Dumbbell
3 × 8 × 30lb
Chest Press
Leverage Machine
3 × 12 × 90lb
Incline Chest Fly
Cable
2 × 15 × 15lb
Preacher Curl
EZ Bar
3 × 8 × 35lb
Concentration Curl
Dumbbell
2 × 12 × 15lb
Incline Curl
Dumbbell
2 × 15 × 10lb
Triceps Extension
Dumbbell
3 × 8 × 20lb
Triceps Pushdown
Cable
2 × 12 × 40lb
Cable Kickback
Cable
2 × 15 × 10lb
You can use this program on Liftosaur - a weightlifting tracker app!
  • Log your workouts there, and have a history of all your workouts on your phone
  • It will automatically update weights, reps and sets for you from workout to workout - according to the program logic
  • And you can customize the programs in any way, change exercises, the exercise logic, sets/reps/weights, etc.
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