Published: March 2026 · Reading time: 8 min · Based on peer-reviewed research

Bro Split vs PPL vs Upper/Lower: Which Split Builds More Muscle?

Choosing a training split is one of the most common questions in strength training. Bro Split (one muscle per day), Push/Pull/Legs (PPL), Upper/Lower, or Full Body — each has its advocates. But what does the science actually say?

The short answer: Training frequency per muscle group is the decisive factor, not the split itself. The meta-analysis by Schoenfeld et al. (2016) clearly shows: training each muscle group at least 2× per week is optimal for hypertrophy.

The Big Comparison

CriterionBro SplitPPLUpper/LowerFull Body
Days/Week5-66 (or 3)43
Frequency/Muscle1×/week2×/week2×/week3×/week
Volume/SessionHigh (15-20 sets)Medium (8-12)Medium (10-14)Low (6-10)
EvidenceSuboptimal (Schoenfeld 2016)OptimalOptimalOptimal
Best ForAdvanced bodybuilders5-6 days available4 days available2-3 days available
Recovery NeedHigh (7 days)Medium (48-72h)Medium (48-72h)Low (24-48h)

Bro Split: The Classic — But Scientifically Suboptimal

The Bro Split divides the body across 5-6 days: Chest Monday, Back Tuesday, Shoulders Wednesday, Legs Thursday, Arms Friday. Each muscle group gets high volume (15-20 sets) once per week.

The problem: Schoenfeld et al. (2016) showed in their meta-analysis that training each muscle 2× per week produces significantly more hypertrophy than 1× per week — with equal total volume. The muscle protein synthesis peak after training lasts only 48-72 hours (Damas et al. 2015). With a Bro Split, you "waste" 4-5 days without a growth signal.

When a Bro Split still makes sense: For very advanced bodybuilders who need 20+ sets per muscle group per week. At that volume, it's practically difficult to fit everything into 2 sessions.

Push/Pull/Legs: The Scientific Gold Standard

PPL divides the body into pushing movements (chest, shoulders, triceps), pulling movements (back, biceps), and legs. As a 6-day split (PPL-PPL), each muscle gets trained 2× per week — exactly the optimal frequency.

Advantages: Optimal frequency (2×/week), moderate volume per session, good recovery between same muscle groups (72h+), allows high total volumes.

Disadvantages: Requires 5-6 training days. As a 3-day PPL (one cycle through), frequency drops to 1×/week — then it's a Bro Split in disguise.

Upper/Lower: The Efficient Compromise

Upper body and lower body alternate. 4 days per week: Mon Upper, Tue Lower, Thu Upper, Fri Lower. Every muscle gets trained 2×.

Advantages: Optimal frequency with only 4 training days. Perfect balance of volume and recovery. Scientifically equal to PPL with less time commitment.

Disadvantages: Lower body days can be very demanding (legs + posterior chain + abs). Arms get less direct work than with PPL.

Full Body: The Underrated Alternative

The entire body 3× per week. Every muscle receives 3 stimuli per week — the highest frequency of all splits.

Advantages: Highest frequency (3×/week), only 3 training days needed, ideal for beginners and time constraints, each session triggers whole-body muscle protein synthesis.

Disadvantages: Less volume per muscle per session (6-10 sets). Can be limiting for advanced lifters who need more volume.

Which Split Should You Choose?

The answer depends on one single variable: How many days per week can you train?

Available DaysRecommended SplitRationale
2-3 daysFull BodyOnly way to achieve 2-3× frequency per muscle
4 daysUpper/Lower2× frequency with optimal volume distribution
5-6 daysPPL (Push/Pull/Legs)2× frequency with more volume and isolation work
6 days + advancedPPL or Arnold SplitHigh volume distributed across optimal frequency
The key takeaway: The "best" split is the one you can consistently sustain. An Upper/Lower you follow for 48 weeks per year beats a PPL you abandon after 6 weeks.

How MUSCLE TECHNICS Handles It Differently

The AI coach automatically selects the optimal split based on your available training days and recovery status:

Instead of locking into a fixed split, the AI adapts the split dynamically to your recovery. That's more evidence-based than rigidly following a weekly plan.

Let AI Choose Your Split

The MUSCLE TECHNICS AI coach analyzes your recovery, volume, and available days — generating the optimal split automatically. Based on Schoenfeld 2016 and 17 additional studies.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is the bro split bad for muscle growth?

Not bad, but suboptimal. Research shows training each muscle 2× per week produces more hypertrophy than 1× (Schoenfeld 2016). Bro splits train each muscle only once weekly.

Can I build muscle with only 3 days per week?

Yes. A full body plan 3× per week gives each muscle 3 growth signals weekly — more than PPL or Upper/Lower. Ideal for beginners and busy schedules.

PPL 3 days or 6 days?

6 days (PPL-PPL) is better because each muscle gets trained 2×. A 3-day PPL trains each muscle only 1× — then Upper/Lower or Full Body is the better choice.

Which is better: Upper/Lower or PPL?

With 4 available days: Upper/Lower. With 5-6 days: PPL. Scientifically no significant difference as long as frequency (2×/muscle/week) and volume are equal.

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