A deload week is a planned reduction in training volume and intensity that allows accumulated fatigue to dissipate without losing fitness. Fatigue masks fitness — after a deload, lifters often hit new personal records as their true strength level becomes visible. This calculator recommends the right deload protocol based on your training history.
Your Training Profile
Count all working sets across all exercises and sessions
Enter your training details to get a deload recommendation
Deload Week Plan
Deload Tips
How to Use the Deload Week Calculator
A deload week is one of the most overlooked tools in strength training. Many lifters train hard for months without a structured deload and wonder why progress stalls, motivation drops, and joints ache. This calculator takes four inputs and generates a specific protocol — telling you exactly how many sets to do, how much weight to use, and when your next deload should be.
Step 1: Enter How Long You've Been Training Without a Deload
Enter the number of weeks since your last deload or complete rest week. If you have never done a structured deload, count from when you started your current training block or program. The longer the block, the more accumulated fatigue you likely carry — even if you don't feel it.
Step 2: Set Your Average RPE
RPE (Rate of Perceived Exertion) on a 1-10 scale represents how close to your max you are training. RPE 8 means you had 2 more reps in the tank. High average RPE (8.5+) accumulates fatigue quickly. Training mostly at RPE 6-7 allows longer blocks. Be honest — many lifters underestimate their true effort level over a long block.
Step 3: Enter Your Weekly Volume
Count all working sets across all exercises in a typical training week. Include every set you push with real effort. A high-volume program (30+ sets/week) demands more frequent deloads than a lower-volume approach (15-20 sets/week). More sets per week accelerates fatigue accumulation regardless of intensity.
Step 4: Select Your Training Experience
Beginners recover faster and tolerate more training stress relative to their recovery capacity, so they can go longer between deloads. Advanced lifters who train closer to their strength ceiling generate more absolute training stress and need more frequent recovery windows.
Reading Your Deload Protocol
The output shows the recommended deload frequency (how often to deload), whether you should deload now, and the specific deload week plan. Volume reduction is applied first — keep your exercises and frequency the same but cut your sets by the recommended percentage. The intensity reduction tells you whether to drop the weight or keep it the same. Most protocols keep the weight near normal and only cut sets significantly.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this deload calculator free to use?
Yes, the deload week calculator is completely free. Get a personalized deload protocol as many times as you want. No signup required and all calculations run in your browser.
Is my training data private?
Yes, all calculations happen locally in your browser. Your training information is never sent to a server or stored anywhere.
What is a deload week?
A deload week is a planned reduction in training volume and/or intensity, typically lasting one week, designed to allow accumulated fatigue to dissipate without losing fitness. Fatigue masks fitness — deloads let your true strength and recovery catch up with your training.
How often should I deload?
Deload frequency depends on training age, intensity, and weekly volume. Beginners typically need a deload every 8-12 weeks. Intermediates every 6-8 weeks. Advanced lifters training at high RPE and high volume may need a deload every 4-6 weeks. Higher average RPE and more weekly sets accelerate fatigue accumulation.
Should I reduce volume or intensity during a deload?
Most evidence supports reducing volume (sets and reps) rather than intensity (weight used) during a deload. Keeping the weight the same but dropping to 40-60% of your normal sets maintains the neural stimulus while allowing fatigue to clear. Some programs reduce both volume and intensity simultaneously.
What is RPE and how does it affect deload timing?
RPE (Rate of Perceived Exertion) is a 1-10 scale of training effort. An RPE of 8 means you could have done 2 more reps. Higher average RPE (8+) generates fatigue faster and requires more frequent deloads. Training at RPE 6-7 allows longer blocks before a deload is needed.
What should I do on a deload week?
During a deload, keep the same exercises and frequency but reduce your sets by 40-60% and optionally drop the weight by 10-20%. Focus on technique, move through full range of motion, and avoid pushing to failure. Prioritize sleep and nutrition. The goal is active recovery, not training through fatigue.
Can I skip the deload and just take a full week off?
A full week off (passive rest) is an option but is generally less effective than an active deload. Active deloads maintain movement patterns, blood flow, and the neural training signal while clearing fatigue. Passive rest can cause a brief performance dip when returning to full training intensity.