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Progressive Warm-Up Sets: The 5 Minutes That Save Your Heavy Lifts

Progressive Warm-Up Sets: The 5 Minutes That Save Your Heavy Lifts

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

If your "warm-up" before squatting 100 kg consists of two minutes on the rowing machine and a few empty-bar reps, you're underprepared. The first heavy set of the day is the riskiest, both for performance and for injury — and the difference between a great session and a mediocre one is often the four or five sets you do before the working sets even start.

Why ramp sets matter

Three reasons:

  1. Neural priming. Your nervous system needs to "remember" the movement at heavier loads. Without ramps, the first working set is technically your first heavy attempt — and it shows.
  2. Tissue preparation. Connective tissue (tendons, fascia) takes longer to warm up than muscle. Ramp sets give it time.
  3. Form rehearsal. Each ramp set is a chance to refine bar path, breath and brace before the load matters.

The standard ramp protocol

For a working weight of W (your top set for the day), the protocol looks like this:

SetWeightRepsRest
Warm-up 1Empty bar (20 kg)10-1560s
Warm-up 250% × W860s
Warm-up 370% × W590s
Warm-up 485% × W390s
Warm-up 5 (heavy days only)92-95% × W1120s
Working set 1100% × WProgrammed reps2-3 min

Worked example — squat working sets at 100 kg

  1. 20 kg × 12 reps
  2. 50 kg × 8 reps
  3. 70 kg × 5 reps
  4. 85 kg × 3 reps
  5. 100 kg × 5 reps (working set 1)
  6. 100 kg × 5 reps (working set 2)
  7. 100 kg × 5 reps (working set 3)

The whole warm-up sequence takes ~6-8 minutes. This is non-negotiable for compound lifts above body weight.

What to skip

You don't need ramp sets on:

The "general warm-up" before specific warm-ups

Before the bar work, do 5 minutes of light cardio + dynamic mobility. This isn't optional even on light days. A typical pre-lift warm-up:

Then move to the bar.

Why most people skip ramps and pay for it

The honest answer: ramps feel boring. There's no glory in 50 kg × 8. So most lifters jump from empty bar to 80% to 100% in three sets. They get away with it for years until one day a knee tweaks or a shoulder pinches and they wonder why.

The five extra minutes of ramp work is the cheapest insurance you can buy on a heavy session.

FitLife's workout cards include the ramp set sequence as part of the planned session for any compound lift over 50% body weight. You don't have to remember the percentages — they're prescribed before you start.

Related: Periodization for natural lifters

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