Starting Strength Phase 1 Workout Program

Origin & Philosophy

Starting Strength was created by Mark Rippetoe, a competitive powerlifter and strength coach based in Wichita Falls, Texas. The program is detailed in his book Starting Strength: Basic Barbell Training, first published in 2005 and now in its 3rd edition (2011). The companion book Practical Programming for Strength Training covers the programming theory behind the novice progression.

The core philosophy: beginners can add weight to the bar every single session for months — the "Novice Effect." Rather than waste this window on machines or complicated periodization, Starting Strength exploits it with a handful of barbell movements, linear loading, and full recovery between sessions. Strength is treated as the most fundamental physical adaptation — muscle size, power, and endurance all improve as side effects of getting stronger.

Who It's For

  • Experience: Complete beginners stepping into a gym for the first time, or lifters returning after a long layoff
  • Goal: Learn the basic barbell lifts and build foundational strength as fast as possible
  • Prerequisites: Access to a barbell, squat rack, and bench — nothing else
  • Diet: Best run on a caloric surplus. Works on maintenance calories too, but progress will slow sooner

Phase 1 is specifically for your first 1–3 weeks of training. It keeps things as simple as possible — only 4 exercises — so you can focus entirely on learning the movements.

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Only 4 exercises to learn — minimizes overwhelm for a true beginner
  • Deadlifting every session maximizes practice on the most important pulling movement while weights are still light
  • Fastest initial strength gains — 10lb squat jumps and 15–20lb deadlift jumps are normal in the first week
  • Sessions are short (~30–40 minutes) with only 3 exercises each

Cons

  • No direct upper back, arm, or ab work — your arms and abs grow only indirectly from the main lifts
  • Only 1 set of Deadlift per session — feels like not enough for some lifters, but recovery demands will prove otherwise quickly
  • Bench Press and Overhead Press are each only trained 3 times every 2 weeks — low frequency for upper body
  • Very short phase — you'll transition to Phase 2 within weeks, so it can feel like you barely started

Program Structure

  • Split: Full body, A/B alternating
  • Periodization: Straight linear progression — add weight every session
  • Rotation: Week 1 = A/B/A, Week 2 = B/A/B, repeat
  • Train 3 days per week on non-consecutive days (e.g., Mon/Wed/Fri)

Both workouts are identical except Bench Press and Overhead Press alternate. Deadlift is in every session.

Exercise Selection & Rationale

Every session starts with Squat because it trains the most muscle mass and benefits most from high frequency. Squatting 3x/week maximizes the technique practice that drives rapid novice gains.

The second exercise alternates between Bench Press (horizontal push) and Overhead Press (vertical push). Together they build complete pressing strength. Alternating gives each lift recovery time.

Deadlift finishes every session. In Phase 1, weights are light enough that deadlifting 3x/week is recoverable. The deadlift trains the entire posterior chain — glutes, hamstrings, back — and is the lift where beginners can add the most weight the fastest.

Set & Rep Scheme

  • Squat, Bench Press, Overhead Press: 3x5 — the classic strength-building scheme. Heavy enough to drive neural adaptation, enough volume to practice the movement.
  • Deadlift: 1x5 — deadlifts are the most systemically fatiguing lift. One heavy set of 5 is sufficient stimulus for a novice. You'll understand why it's only 1 set once the weight gets heavy.

All sets are straight work sets at the same weight. No AMRAP sets, no back-off sets. Hit your 5 reps, add weight next time.

Progressive Overload

Weight increases per session:

Lift Standard increase First few sessions
Squat +5lb +10lb for first 2–3 sessions
Deadlift +5lb +10–15lb for first few sessions
Bench Press +5lb
Overhead Press +5lb

When you stall (can't complete all prescribed reps for 2 consecutive workouts on the same lift):

  1. Deload 10% from your current working weight on that lift
  2. Work back up using normal session-to-session increases

Each lift is tracked independently. Stalling on Overhead Press doesn't affect Squat progression.

Transition to Phase 2: When your deadlift gets heavy enough that recovering between sessions becomes difficult (typically after 1–3 weeks), move to Starting Strength Phase 2, which replaces deadlifts with Power Clean on alternate sessions.

How Long to Run It / What Next

Run Phase 1 for 1–3 weeks. The transition point is when deadlift recovery starts suffering — you'll notice the deadlift feeling sluggish at the start of sessions, or failing to complete sets because of accumulated fatigue rather than true strength limits.

Move to: Starting Strength Phase 2. The only change is Power Clean replaces Deadlift in Workout B.

Equipment Needed

  • Barbell and plates
  • Squat rack or power rack
  • Flat bench

The simplest equipment requirements of any Starting Strength phase — no pull-up bar, no microplates, no bumper plates needed.

Rest Times

  • Warmup sets: Just long enough to change plates (30–60 seconds)
  • Early work sets: 2–3 minutes
  • Heavy work sets: 3–5 minutes (up to 7 minutes near max effort on Squat/Deadlift)

Rest as long as needed to complete the next set. Rushing rest is the #1 reason novices fail sets they should make.

How to Pick Starting Weights

On your first day, for each exercise:

  1. Start with the empty bar (45lb) for a set of 5
  2. Add 10–20lb, do another set of 5
  3. Repeat until bar speed noticeably slows
  4. Use that weight as your first working weight

Typical starting points for untrained males: Squat 45–85lb, Bench Press 45–65lb, Overhead Press 45lb, Deadlift 95–135lb.

Start lighter than you think. You have months of 5lb jumps ahead — starting light and building momentum is far better than starting heavy and stalling in week 2.

Common Modifications

  • Add chin-ups early: Some lifters add Chin Up (3 sets to failure) at the end of Workout B before Phase 3. Rippetoe himself adds them later, but they won't hurt if you want more upper back work.
  • Bigger deadlift jumps: If 5lb jumps feel trivially easy in the first week, jump 10–15lb per session on deadlift until it starts feeling heavy. This is expected and normal for Phase 1.
  • Can't use 45lb bar: Use dumbbells or a lighter bar until you can handle the standard 45lb barbell. Goblet Squat is a good substitute for Squat in this case.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Starting Strength good for beginners?

Yes, Starting Strength is one of the most well-known beginner barbell programs. Phase 1 uses only 4 exercises — squat, bench press, overhead press, and deadlift — making it simple to learn. It's designed for complete beginners stepping into a gym for the first time.

How many days a week is Starting Strength Phase 1?

It's a 3-day program trained on non-consecutive days, typically Monday/Wednesday/Friday. Two alternating workouts (A and B) rotate each session, with each workout containing only 3 exercises.

How does progression work on Starting Strength?

Starting Strength uses straight linear progression — you add weight every single session. Squat and deadlift increase by 5lb per session (10-15lb in the first few sessions), and bench press and overhead press increase by 5lb per session.

How long should I run Starting Strength Phase 1?

Phase 1 is designed for your first 1-3 weeks of training only. Move to Phase 2 when your deadlift gets heavy enough that recovering between sessions becomes difficult. Phase 2 introduces power cleans to replace deadlifts on alternate days.

What is the difference between Starting Strength phases?

Phase 1 has deadlifts every session while weights are light. Phase 2 replaces deadlifts with power cleans on alternate days to aid recovery. Phase 3 adds chin-ups and creates a 4-workout rotation with both deadlifts and power cleans alternating.

Why does Starting Strength only have 1 set of deadlifts?

Deadlifts are the most systemically fatiguing lift — they tax the entire posterior chain, grip, and central nervous system. One heavy set of 5 is sufficient stimulus for a novice. As the weight gets heavier, you'll understand why more sets aren't needed.

~30-45 min per workout
3x/week, 3 exercises per day
Barbell
Total Sets: 14
Strength Sets: 14, 100%
Hypertrophy Sets: 0, 0%
Upper Sets: 6 (6s), 2d
Lower Sets: 8 (8s), 2d
Core Sets: 0
Push Sets: 6 (6s), 2d
Pull Sets: 2 (2s), 2d
Legs Sets: 6 (6s), 2d
Shoulders: 5↑ (5s), 2d
Triceps: 3↑ (3s), 2d
Back: 2↑ (2s), 1d
Abs: 0↑
Glutes: 5↑ (5s), 2d
Hamstrings: 4↑ (4s), 2d
Quadriceps: 7↑ (7s), 2d
Chest: 5↑ (5s), 2d
Biceps: 0↑
Calves: 4↑ (4s), 2d
Forearms: 0↑

Workout A

Squat
Barbell
3 × 5 × 45lb
Bench Press
Barbell
3 × 5 × 45lb
Deadlift
Barbell
5 × 95lb

Workout B

Squat
Barbell
3 × 5 × 45lb
Overhead Press
Barbell
3 × 5 × 45lb
Deadlift
Barbell
5 × 95lb
You can use this program on Liftosaur - a weightlifting tracker app!
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  • 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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