Programming Your Bench Press: Intensity, Volume, and Supplemental Lifts
Programming Your Bench Press: Intensity, Volume, and Supplemental Lifts
There is a persistent myth in the fitness world that variety equals quality in an exercise program,
somehow making it more useful for general physical fitness. The idea of muscle confusion and
preparing for the unknown by surprising your biology with an unexpected combination or series
of tasks has merit to only the most superficial consideration of physical fitness. Instead, we
teach four main lifts and a small handful of additional lifts or movements that comprise 90+% of
our strength training programs. And we treat strength as the foundation of even the most
comprehensive approach to health and fitness. It may seem odd, then, that out of the hundreds
of exercises you can perform in any given globo-gym that the bench press makes the cut as one
of four main lifts.
Most people who train do not want to be powerlifters. So, why should they train like one? The
bench press, in particular, seems to be the opposite of functional fitness, since you actually get
to lie down while doing it. It has a short kinetic chain—the parts of your body actually involved in
moving the bar. And pushing something away from you with your back entirely supported is not
often seen in real life or most sports. Shouldn't we restrict our lifts to those that require balance
and coordination?
The answer lies in your biology and the fact that your subjective intent has no bearing on
physical adaptation. Often times, functional fitness enthusiasts miss this aspect of training. Their
intention may be to cause widespread, general adaptations, improving strength, speed, agility,
balance, and other traits through little more than experience—more like a video game than a
scientific process. All your body knows is sensory input + coordinated muscular contractions
(with a bunch of auto-regulated steps in between). Instead, our intent must bow to the principles
of adaptation: If you want to get strong, you have to train in a way that makes you strong, not in
a way that mimics the applications of strength or in a way that you think will make you stronger.
The bench press is one of the four main lifts that comprise any quality strength training program
because, in short, you need to lift heavy weights often to build strength; and no other upper
body lift trains as much muscle mass with weights as heavy as the bench press. The bench fills
a gap where your overhead press is concerned, getting heavier weights in your hands and
augmenting your overhead press for greater systemic stress.
Below we give some ideas for programming your bench press when you are in the mid to later
intermediate stages of training. Keep in mind that when it comes to programming everything
works and nothing works. Timing and well-reasoned, gradual changes will do more for your
bench press than any single change or supplemental lift.
The four-day split organizes your programming into two upper-body days and two lower-body
days every week. With a four-day split, you can give equal consideration to your press and
bench press, but this allows you to manipulate important variables, utilize supplemental lifts
more effectively, and include assistance work that can directly target your benching needs.
Each of these training slots has a goal, and while this can become much more complicated, a
simple and effective method of programming is to assign an intensity goal and a volume goal to
each of these slots.
This basic four-day split rendition immediately increases the frequency that you are bench
pressing and pressing if you are moving from a three day per week program.
The power of a four day split for an intermediate trainee is in its versatility. Including both
volume and intensity work during the same week gives you two kinds of stress to adjust. While
we do not want to add too much complexity to a program, the more levers and knobs at our
disposal, the better able we will be to make minimum effective dose changes in response to
actual training. This leads to what is most desirable in a program: steady progress over a very
long period.
The starting place is simple, bench press two times per week. One day is dedicated to
intensity—few total reps at a near-maximum effort load. The other day is a volume day—
sufficient accumulated sets and reps to cause fatigue and an adaptive response. Likely you will
be doing chin-ups (or a variation like lat pulldowns) and/or barbell rows, but for now, let's keep
the focus on the main upper body lifts.
From this starting place, the next step is to slowly increase the amount of volume and intensity
stress in the program each week. First, add the appropriate amount of weight to the bar at a
given volume. For most people, adding 2.5 lb to 5 lb the volume work and intensity work every
week works well. Remember to prioritize sustained progress over speedy progress.
Eventually, you will not be able to add weight to the bar without some adjustments. The next
step is to alter the set and rep scheme.
There are no hard and fast rules regarding what your volume day should look like, but there
exists a realm of commonality into which most intermediate lifters fit: the volume day commonly
should remain between three and six reps per set. For most people, it can help to organize your
plans by limiting your volume work to five total sets per training slot. This is an artificial
limitation, but many lifters will run out of time if they have to do six, seven, or eight sets of
volume work in the three to six rep range. Sticking to the three to six rep range, you have
additional options for manipulating your volume day work, keeping the volume static (more-or-
less) but changing the sets and reps: 3x5 to 5x3 to 4x4 to 4x5 to 5x4 and so on. These small
changes may allow you to eke out a few more weeks of small increases before making more
significant changes.
For volume work, the weight on the bar is only one factor and appropriately adjusting the weight
to find the correct stress when you change the sets and reps is okay.
Next, the intensity day will start alternating weekly between different rep ranges:
● Week 1: 1x5
● Week 2: 1x3
● Week 3: 1x1
Ideally, you are setting new PRs in each of these rep ranges each week, but even if these aren’t
all-time PRs, the intensity should be appropriately close to a maximum effort for that rep range
for the day.
The most basic strategy is to pick the supplemental lift that is appropriate for your training. The
less advanced you are, the more basic the variation—close grip bench press, paused bench
press, and floor press. Then, train this lift in a manner very similar to a single-lift linear
progression. For example, you might floor press for three sets of five reps (3 x 5), starting
relatively light because the movement is new to you. Then, make small weight increases every
week. As the weight goes up, pyramid the reps per set, going from three sets of five (3 x 5) to
five sets of three (5 x 5) and eventually to doubles and heavy singles. Improving and lifting
heavy with a new, complementary lift will help improve your bench press.
Accessory Lifts
Perhaps more than any other of the main lifts, the bench press responds well to the addition of
assistance work. Assistance work will fall after the supplemental lift of the day on your press and
bench press days. In general, the bench press responds to assistance work that builds your
triceps, chest, and upper back.
Unlike your supplemental lifts, the goal of accessory work isn't to improve your performance of
the accessory lift. Rather, accessory work adds the appropriate amount of narrowly targeted
stress to your training session with the ancillary benefit of that stress carrying over to your
bench press. Accessory work tends to cause much less systemic stress, instead affecting the
local muscular area. Accessory work tends to help you train your main or supplemental lifts
harder, target specific parts of the kinetic chain with the aim that focused effort will lead to
modest improvements, and build muscle mass. Rarely will accessory work revolutionize your
bench press overnight, but consistent, muscle-building hard work will help you aggregate gains
in the long run.
The strategy with accessory work is not to overthink it: most accessory work should be
challenging and should fall in the eight to twelve repetition range per set. You might select a
load that allows you to complete twelve repetitions on the first set but will force some drop off
due to fatigue in subsequent sets.
So many options, so little time. There are volumes written on bench press programming, many
of which will deviate wildly from what we have presented here. We hope this article gives you
some ideas for a framework for your training and how to make small changes for great effect. If
you take nothing else away from this discussion, remember that when planning your training
you should have a goal in mind, a next waypoint for your program. Then plan to take as long as
possible to get there, allowing for detours and deviations based on your day-to-day training, the
actual weights you lift, and a critical analysis of what works for you and what doesn't. Everything
else is just opinion, and everyone has one of those.