If you want to own the bar, this 8-week squat program is your blueprint. It combines heavy lifts, explosive speed work, and full-body training to boost strength, build muscle, and push your 1RM upward. Whether you’re newer to squatting or chasing a PR, this plan can help you make serious gains.

Squats aren’t just about leg growth — they’re a total-body lift. This program gives structure and intent to your training, so you avoid aimless workouts and plateaus. With consistent work, you’ll:

  • Grow your quads, glutes, and hamstrings
  • Improve squat technique and depth
  • Increase your 1-rep max
  • Build core stability and upper-back support
  • Leverage progressive overload intelligently

But none of that works without recovery, nutrition, and consistency.

  • Progressive Overload – Gradually increase load or reps over time.
  • Squatting Twice Weekly – One heavy day and one speed day to hit different strength qualities.
  • Prioritized Recovery – Quality sleep, smart nutrition, and active rest between sessions.
  • Accessory & Weak-Link Work – Target your imbalances (glutes, hamstrings, upper back, core).

You’ll squat twice per week and train your full body on the remaining days, with accessory lifts to support the main movement.

Here’s how the typical week is laid out:

DayFocusPurpose
Day 1 (Heavy Squat)75–90% of 1RMBuild raw strength under load
Day 2 (Full-Body Hypertrophy)Compound & accessory liftsSupport the squat and build muscle
Rest / Active RecoveryRecovery, mobility, breathing work
Day 3 (Dynamic / Speed Squat)50–65% of 1RMTrain explosive power and efficiency
Day 4 (Full-Body Hypertrophy)Support work againFill in gaps and drive growth
Weekend (Rest / Mobility / Recovery)Let the body adapt, restore, prepare

Note: If you ever feel overly fatigued, you can move a rest day between your squat days. Recovery is more important than rigid structure.

Here’s a breakdown of each day’s goal, structure, and progression:

  • Squat: 4 sets using the weekly %-based rep scheme
  • Leg Press or Hack Squat: 3 × 4–6
  • Abductors: 3 × 4–6
  • Hyperextensions: 3 × 4–6
  • Lat Pulldown: 3 × 4–6

In week 8, skip accessory work — just hit your squat and focus on peaking.

  • Weeks 1–2: ~ 75% for 2–3 reps
  • Weeks 3–4: ~ 80% for 2–3 reps
  • Weeks 5–6: ~ 85% for 2–3 reps
  • Weeks 7–8: ~ 90% for 2–3 reps
  • Week 9: Test your new max (1RM)
  • Box Squat: 8 sets using lighter % (50–65% of 1RM)
  • Hip Thrust: 4 × 8–10
  • Leg Extension: 4 × 8–10
  • Side Crunch: 4 × 10
  • Rear Delt Raise: 4 × 10

Note: In week 8, you skip dynamic work to deload and allow your body to peak.

Throughout the 8 weeks, the percentages for speed work follow a similar rep progression (2 → 3 reps per set) while increasing load (50 → 65%).

  • Standing Barbell Press — 3 × 5
  • Bent-Over Barbell Row — 3 × 5
  • Dumbbell Bench Press — 3 × 5
  • Barbell Curl — 3 × 10
  • Tricep Dip — 3 × 10
  • Leg Curl — 3 × 10
  • Lying Leg Raise — 3 × 15
  • Seated Calf Raise — 3 × 13
  • Hip flexor stretches (2–3 reps, 10–15 s each side)
  • Ankle mobility drills (rise-toe-hold, heel-lift hold, etc.)
  • Deep goblet squat jumps (bodyweight or light load) to activate glutes & quads

Don’t skip this — mobility and activation directly impact your depth, safety, and strength.

  • Eat lean proteins, complex carbs, and healthy fats (chicken, oats, rice, olive oil, etc.).
  • Sleep 7–9 hours nightly.
  • Stay hydrated, limit alcohol, and practice active recovery (walking, stretching).
  • Consider basic supplements like whey protein and creatine (not required, but helpful).
  • Knees caving in → Focus on pushing them out throughout the rep
  • Loose core → Brace hard, take a deep belly breath, hold tight until lockout
  • Looking down → Keep your gaze forward and neck neutral
  • Unstable bar → Grip tight, elbows down & back, keep the bar secure
  • Always prioritize form over ego, especially on speed days
  • Warm-ups and mobility work are not optional
  • Follow the programmed progressions — don’t guess too far ahead
  • Commit to nutrition, sleep, and recovery like a full-time job
  • Stay consistent and trust the process

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