A lean bulk is a controlled caloric surplus designed to maximize muscle growth while minimizing fat gain. Unlike a "dirty bulk" where you eat everything in sight, a lean bulk keeps the surplus small — typically 200-350 calories above maintenance — so the majority of weight gained is muscle tissue, not fat.
Research shows that muscle protein synthesis has an upper limit. Beyond a certain caloric threshold, additional calories are stored as fat — not converted to extra muscle. A moderate surplus of 200-350 kcal provides enough energy for muscle building without the excessive fat gain that makes a subsequent cutting phase long and painful.
Dirty bulking (500-1000+ surplus) doesn't build more muscle than lean bulking. It just builds more fat. Studies show that after 12 weeks, lean and dirty bulkers gain comparable amounts of muscle — but the dirty bulkers gain 3-5× more fat.
Step 1: Find your maintenance calories. Track your weight for 2 weeks while eating normally. If your weight is stable, that's your maintenance level. A common estimate: bodyweight (kg) × 33-35 for moderately active individuals.
Step 2: Add a modest surplus. Start with +200 kcal above maintenance. If you're not gaining 0.25-0.5kg per week after 2-3 weeks, increase to +300 or +350.
Step 3: Monitor the ratio. If you're gaining more than 0.5kg per week, the surplus is too high and excess goes to fat. If you're gaining less than 0.2kg per week, increase slightly.
| Macronutrient | Amount | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Protein | 1.6-2.0g/kg bodyweight | Muscle protein synthesis (Morton 2018) |
| Fat | 0.8-1.2g/kg bodyweight | Hormone production, cell function |
| Carbs | Remaining calories | Training fuel, glycogen, recovery |
The caloric surplus means you recover faster and can handle more volume. This is the time to push your training:
Volume: Train at or near your MAV (Maximum Adaptive Volume). Pelland (2024) shows a clear dose-response relationship — more volume during a surplus translates to more muscle growth, up to your MRV.
Progressive overload: In a surplus, you should see consistent strength increases. If your e1RM isn't climbing week to week, something is off — either volume is too high (exceeding MRV), sleep is insufficient, or the surplus isn't adequate.
RIR targets: Push closer to failure than during a deficit. RIR 1-2 on most working sets, RIR 0 on the last set of isolation exercises. Your recovery capacity supports this intensity during a bulk.
A lean bulk typically runs for 3-6 months. Shorter than 3 months doesn't allow meaningful muscle accumulation. Longer than 6 months risks gradual fat gain accumulating to the point where a long cut becomes necessary.
When to transition to a cut: When your body fat reaches ~15-17% (men) or ~25-28% (women). At this point, further bulking starts adding proportionally more fat than muscle due to insulin sensitivity changes. Cut back down to ~10-12% (men) or ~20-22% (women), then start the next lean bulk.
| Approach | Surplus | Muscle gain/month | Fat gain/month | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Body recomp | -200 to 0 | 0.2-0.5kg | Negative | Beginners, high BF |
| Lean bulk | +200-350 | 0.5-1.0kg | 0.2-0.5kg | Intermediates |
| Dirty bulk | +500-1000 | 0.5-1.0kg | 1-2kg | Nobody (inefficient) |
200-350 kcal. This provides enough energy for muscle protein synthesis without excessive fat storage. Start at +200 and adjust based on weekly weight gain.
0.25-0.5kg per week for intermediates. Beginners can gain slightly faster (0.5-0.75kg) because a larger proportion is muscle. If you're gaining more than 0.5kg/week, reduce the surplus.
Some fat gain is inevitable, but with a 200-350 kcal surplus, it's minimal. Most lifters gain 1-2% body fat over a 4-month lean bulk — barely noticeable visually but significant for muscle gain.
MUSCLE TECHNICS pushes volume to your MAV during surplus, tracks e1RM progression, and manages mesocycles for optimal muscle gain. Science-based bulking.
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