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How Long Should You Rest Between Sets? (The Numbers Are Different Than You Think)

How Long Should You Rest Between Sets? (The Numbers Are Different Than You Think)

2026-05-16 · ~7 min read · By the FitLife coaching team

Walk into any commercial gym and most lifters are resting somewhere between 45 and 75 seconds between sets — usually because they're scrolling Instagram and that's how long the last reel lasted. That's a problem if their goal is strength, and not ideal even for hypertrophy.

The actual research-based rest periods

GoalCompound liftsIsolationWhy
Strength (1-6 reps)3-5 minutes2-3 minutesPhosphocreatine recovery; nervous system reset
Hypertrophy (8-12 reps)90s-2 minutes60-90sBalance recovery + metabolic stress
Endurance (15+ reps)30-60s30-45sBuild muscular endurance, lactate tolerance
Cardio circuits0-30s0-30sMaintain elevated heart rate
Active recovery / mobilityAs neededAs neededRecovery, not adaptation

Why short rest hurts strength

Between heavy sets, your body needs to:

  1. Resynthesize phosphocreatine (PCr), the primary energy source for sub-10-second efforts. PCr recovery takes ~3 minutes.
  2. Clear metabolic byproducts that interfere with high-force production.
  3. Allow the nervous system to fully prepare for another high-effort attempt.

If you rest only 60 seconds between heavy 5-rep sets, you'll likely get 5 → 4 → 3 reps across the sets. Total productive volume drops. Your "5 × 5 at 100 kg" becomes "actually 5/4/3 at 100 kg." That's not what you programmed.

Why long rest can hurt hypertrophy

For 8-12 rep work, both fatigue accumulation and metabolic stress contribute to muscle growth. Resting 4 minutes between hypertrophy sets means each set comes in fully fresh — losing the metabolic stress component. 90s-2 minutes is the well-supported sweet spot.

How to actually time rest

Use a timer app or your phone clock. "Feel" alone is unreliable — most lifters underestimate elapsed time and rest 30-50% less than they intended.

The structure for a working 5×5 squat session:

  1. Set 1 → start timer → rest 3 minutes
  2. Set 2 → start timer → rest 3 minutes
  3. Continue

For accessory work (3 × 10 dumbbell row), use 90 seconds. Set timer, watch the clock.

What to do during rest

Between heavy compound sets:

Between accessory sets:

The "supersets" question

Supersets (two exercises back-to-back, no rest) are useful for:

They're not appropriate for the heaviest compound lifts where rest is critical.

How rest changes by training experience

Beginners (under 6 months) recover faster between sets because they're not loading heavy enough to deplete PCr stores. They can often get away with 60-90 seconds even on compounds.

Intermediates and advanced lifters need full prescribed rest. The heavier the load relative to your max, the more rest matters.

If you take one change from this article: time your rest periods deliberately for the next month. You'll notice your last set of compounds is suddenly cleaner — same weight, more reps, better form. That's the rest doing its job.

Related: RPE & RIR explained · Progressive warm-up sets

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