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PPL vs Upper/Lower vs Full Body: Picking Your First Split

PPL vs Upper/Lower vs Full Body: Picking Your First Split

2026-05-16 · ~8 min read · By the FitLife coaching team

The first programming decision a new lifter makes — Push/Pull/Legs (PPL), Upper/Lower (UL), or Full Body — usually gets made for the wrong reason: whatever a popular YouTuber recommends. The right answer depends on three things: how many days a week you'll actually train, your goals, and how recovered you typically feel between sessions.

The three splits at a glance

AspectFull BodyUpper / LowerPPL (Push/Pull/Legs)
Days per week2-3 ideal4 ideal3 or 6
Frequency per muscle2-3×/week2×/week1-2×/week
Per-session volumeLow (3-4 lifts)Medium (5-6)High (5-7)
Recovery demandLow-mediumMediumMedium-high
Best forBeginners, busy people, fat lossIntermediate, balanced goalsHypertrophy, advanced, time-rich
Skipped session impactLow — every session is full bodyMedium — half the body skippedHigh — full muscle group skipped

When to choose Full Body

You're a beginner (less than 6 months serious training). You can train 3 days a week, max. You sometimes skip sessions. You want fat loss as a primary or secondary goal.

Sample Full Body day

  1. Compound lower (squat or deadlift variant) — 3 × 6-10 @ RPE 8
  2. Compound upper push (bench or overhead press) — 3 × 6-10 @ RPE 8
  3. Compound upper pull (row or pull-up) — 3 × 8-12 @ RPE 8
  4. Accessory or core — 2-3 sets

Three of these per week (Mon/Wed/Fri), with slight exercise variation between sessions, and you've covered everything.

When to choose Upper / Lower

You're intermediate (6+ months consistent). You can train 4 days. You want both strength and hypertrophy. You like more volume per session than Full Body allows.

Sample Upper / Lower week

Each muscle group hit twice per week — the sweet spot for hypertrophy in most research.

When to choose PPL

You're advanced (1+ year consistent training). Hypertrophy is your top priority. You can commit to 6 days per week reliably. You enjoy spending 75-90 minutes per session.

Sample PPL week (6-day version)

Why 3-day PPL usually fails

Doing PPL only 3 days a week (Mon/Wed/Fri = Push/Pull/Legs once) gives each muscle group only one session per week. That's below the optimal frequency for hypertrophy for most people. If you're 3 days a week, choose Full Body instead.

The decision flowchart

  1. How many days a week, honestly, can you train? 2-3 → Full Body. 4 → Upper/Lower. 5-6 → PPL.
  2. Are you new (less than 6 months)? Pick Full Body regardless.
  3. Have you been training over a year and want hypertrophy? PPL.
  4. Want a balanced general-fitness plan and have 4 days? Upper/Lower.

One detail people miss

Whichever split you choose, the actual outcome depends more on consistency over months than on the split selection. A "wrong" split done for 18 months crushes the "perfect" split done for 4 weeks. Pick the one you'll actually do.

FitLife's onboarding asks how many days you can train. The split you get is matched to that answer — not what you wish you could do, what you'll actually do. Build mine →

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