Both matter — but volume (sets) is the stronger driver for muscle growth than intensity (weight) alone. Pelland et al. (2024, 67 studies) found a continuous dose-response relationship between volume and hypertrophy.
| Phase | Focus |
|---|---|
| Week 1-2 | Lower volume, RIR 2-3 — adaptation |
| Week 3-4 | Increase volume, RIR 2 |
| Week 5-6 | Maximum volume, RIR 1 |
| Week 7 | Deload: 50% volume |
Managing these phases manually requires tracking volume per muscle, documenting RIR, and recognizing when to deload. Or automate it: MUSCLE TECHNICS manages periodization (MEV → MAV → MRV → Deload) automatically per Painter (2012).
Pelland (2024, 67 studies) shows a clear dose-response: more sets per muscle per week = more hypertrophy up to your individual maximum (MRV). If forced to choose, more volume is the more reliable path to growth.
Volume alone is not enough. Training 3×10 with the same weight forever leads to stagnation. Progressive overload means total stress must increase over time — primarily through heavier weights at the same reps.
Step 1 — Increase weight (primary): 80kg × 8 → × 9 → × 10 → 82.5kg × 8. This cycle is the core of progressive overload.
Step 2 — Increase sets (secondary): When weight stalls, add 1-2 sets per muscle per week. More sets = more effective reps = new growth stimulus.
Step 3 — Change exercise (when both stall): Fonseca (2014) shows exercise variation alone can break plateaus. Bench stalls → switch to incline DB press.
| Week | Bench Press | What happens |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 80kg × 3×8 | Starting point |
| 2 | 80kg × 3×9 | +1 rep per set |
| 3 | 80kg × 3×10 | Top of rep range |
| 4 | 82.5kg × 3×8 | Weight increase, reps reset |
| 5 | 82.5kg × 3×8 | Stall — same reps as week 4 |
| 6 | 82.5kg × 4×8 | +1 set added (volume) |
| 7 | 82.5kg × 4×9 | New progression from added volume |
| 8 | 82.5kg × 4×10 | Ready for next weight jump |
Result: total work from 1,920kg to 3,300kg = +72% in 8 weeks. THAT is progressive overload in practice.
Prioritize more sets when: You are a beginner below MAV volume. A large muscle group needs more stimulus. Weight increases are too large for isolation (12kg → 14kg = 17% jump).
Prioritize more weight when: Heavy compounds where weight is the primary tension driver. You are already at upper volume range. Sessions already exceed 75 minutes.
Both work together across a mesocycle (Painter 2012): weeks 1-2 focus on weight increases at moderate volume, weeks 3-4 add volume, weeks 5-6 push both to maximum, then deload.
When adding sets, consider fractional contributions. 3 sets of bench press give your triceps 1.5 fractional sets of credit. Before adding 4 direct tricep sets, calculate whether your triceps are actually underserved. Often 2 direct sets after compounds are sufficient. MUSCLE TECHNICS calculates fractional contributions automatically and shows your true weekly volume per muscle group.
The Pelland (2024) meta-analysis confirms: volume has a stronger dose-response relationship with hypertrophy than intensity alone. But progressive overload (increasing weight over time) is necessary to prevent adaptation. The optimal approach combines both: increase weight when possible (primary driver), increase volume when weight stalls (secondary driver), change exercises when both stall (tertiary).
This mirrors exactly how mesocycle periodization works (Painter 2012): Weeks 1-2 focus on weight progression at moderate volume. Weeks 3-4 increase both weight and volume. Weeks 5-6 push both to near-maximum. Week 7 deload. Each cycle builds on the previous one because both variables are strategically managed.
The bottom line: It is not either/or. Both more weight AND more sets drive hypertrophy — the question is which to prioritize at any given moment. The answer depends on where you are in your mesocycle and whether you are closer to stalling on weight or on volume. MUSCLE TECHNICS manages both variables automatically based on your training data.
Summary: More weight is the primary driver of progressive overload. More sets are the secondary lever when weight stalls. Exercise variation is the tertiary option when both stall. A deload is the reset button when everything stalls simultaneously. This hierarchy — weight → sets → exercise → deload — is the evidence-based sequence for continuous long-term growth. MUSCLE TECHNICS monitors your e1RM trends per exercise and automatically recommends the appropriate next step from this hierarchy when progress stalls.
The answer to the original question: you need both, applied strategically. Start each mesocycle by pushing weight. When weight stalls, add volume. When both stall, rotate exercises. When everything stalls, deload. This cycle repeats indefinitely — and it works at every level from beginner to elite.