The 12-week home dumbbell plan: 1 pair, full body, zero excuses
If you've got one pair of adjustable dumbbells (or even one set of fixed 10-15 kg dumbbells) and 35 minutes three days a week, you can build serious muscle and strength. This 12-week program is what I'd give a friend who's starting at home and wants to be visibly stronger by spring.
Equipment needed
- One pair of dumbbells (ideally 5-25 kg adjustable; fixed-weight dumbbells work too)
- A bench, sturdy stool, or just the floor
- 3-4 square meters of space
- A timer (your phone's clock works)
The schedule
3 sessions per week. Day A → Day B → Day C → Repeat. Take 1 rest day between sessions. So a typical week looks like:
Mon Day A → Tue Rest → Wed Day B → Thu Rest → Fri Day C → Sat-Sun Rest or walking.
Day A — Lower body emphasis
- Goblet squat — 4 sets of 8-12 reps, rest 90s
- Romanian deadlift (RDL) — 4 sets of 8-10, rest 90s
- Walking lunge — 3 sets of 10 each leg, rest 60s
- Single-leg glute bridge — 3 sets of 12 each side, no dumbbell needed
- Plank — 3 sets of 45 seconds
Day B — Upper push emphasis
- Dumbbell bench press (on floor or bench) — 4 sets of 8-12, rest 90s
- Dumbbell shoulder press — 4 sets of 8-10, rest 90s
- Push-ups — 3 sets of max reps, rest 60s
- Tricep overhead extension (both hands on one dumbbell) — 3 sets of 12, rest 45s
- Side plank — 3 sets of 30 seconds each side
Day C — Upper pull + posterior chain
- Single-arm dumbbell row (use chair or knee) — 4 sets of 10 each arm, rest 75s
- Renegade rows — 3 sets of 6 each side, rest 75s
- Dumbbell bicep curl — 3 sets of 10-12, rest 45s
- Dumbbell rear delt fly — 3 sets of 12, rest 45s
- Dead bug — 3 sets of 8 each side
How to progress (this is the magic)
The single biggest mistake home lifters make is doing the same weight forever. Here's your progression rule, called double progression:
For each exercise, you have a rep range (e.g., 8-12). When you can hit the TOP of the range on all working sets (e.g., 4 sets of 12 dumbbell bench press at 15 kg), the next workout you go up in weight (to 17.5 or 20 kg) and start back at the BOTTOM of the rep range (8 reps).
If you can't afford new dumbbells, you progress by:
- Slowing the tempo (3 sec down, 1 sec pause, 1 sec up)
- Adding pause reps (2-second pause at hardest part)
- Switching to single-arm variations (doubles the effective weight)
- Adding 1 set per exercise
The 12-week structure
| Weeks | Phase | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| 1-4 | Foundation | Master form. Use 60-70% of max effort. Quality over weight. |
| 5-8 | Build | Push reps to the top of the range. Add weight when you hit it. Real growth. |
| 9-12 | Push | Heaviest weights, closest to failure. Add a 4th set on main lifts. |
Week 13 is a "deload" — lighter weights, half the volume, full recovery. Then restart the cycle with new strength baselines.
Realistic expectations
If you train consistently (15+ sessions across the 12 weeks), eat enough protein (1.6 g/kg minimum), and sleep 7+ hours nightly, expect:
- Beginners: 3-5 kg of muscle, 5-10 kg of strength gain on main lifts
- Intermediate (1+ year of training): 1-2 kg of muscle, more strength than size gain
Body composition usually shifts more than the scale does. Take photos and measurements at week 1, 6, and 12.
When to switch programs
After 12 weeks of this, your body has adapted heavily. You'll want to switch to a 4-day upper/lower split or a push/pull/legs program to keep growing. See the comparison here.
For now: pick your start day, write the dates in your calendar, do the work. The plan is dead simple. Execution is where the gains live.
FitLife builds your personalized workout, diet and progress tracker around your body, goals and equipment. No signup. Works offline. Free forever.
Start in 2 minutes →