Strength Training and Building Muscle for Older Lifters (40+)
I waited until I was a couple of years into my 40s before writing this article, but now I’ve turned 42, and having trained many older lifters, I feel I have enough experience to advise on this.
The first thing I would say is don’t baby yourself. Far too many people give up training hard far too early because they think they’re too old, when they just need to train better and smarter. They could get away with a lot when they were younger and not get hurt, but you have to train smarter when you're older.
The first thing I would say is don’t baby yourself. Far too many people give up training hard far too early because they think they’re too old, when they just need to train better and smarter. They could get away with a lot when they were younger and not get hurt, but you have to train smarter when you're older.
- Use good form (no ego lifting) and be patient with progressive overload
You still want to be trying to achieve progressive overload, but you don't want to force it by changing your form. I've seen people try to add reps, or increase the weight, and then reduce the range of motion, do the eccentric quicker, swing their body, and the reps look completely different. If your form has to change, then you haven't made progress and haven't gotten stronger. Progressive overload is when you add reps or weight while still using the same form. Rushing to add reps or weight when you're not ready greatly increases your injury risk when you're an older lifter.
Strive for every rep to be perfect, done with good control, and use the same standards for every rep. Controlling the eccentric for around 2 seconds) helps standardise your form.
This doesn't mean you won't be training and pushing the sets hard. It just means you need to push the sets hard while maintaining good and consistent form.
- Listen to your body: If something hurts, stop and do something else.
Sometimes, certain exercises might cause you issues even with good form. If this is the case, ditch the exercise and do one that doesn't hurt.
Training shouldn't be the cause of you walking around with aches and pains all the time.
At 42 years old, I don't experience any aches or pains, and training significantly enhances my quality of life. This is how it should be.
- Take longer to warm up
- Be careful with how much volume and frequency you do. Joints can take longer to recover
There's not a hard rule on this, but you might you do better if you reduce the frequency or volume you train a bit, especially if you're having joint issues. Having extra rest days compared to when you were younger might be beneficial.
- Incorporate mobility work
Fortunately, improving mobility doesn’t require a significant time commitment. Just ten to fifteen minutes of dedicated mobility work each day has made a remarkable difference in my overall flexibility.
Don’t become the person who struggles to bend down or squat due to tightness. Prioritizing mobility now will pay off in the long run, keeping you agile and pain-free as you age.
- Incorporate cardio
Improving your cardiovascular fitness aids in recovery after workouts, but also helps ensure your cardio isn't the limiting factor when you're lifting weights, ensuring you can push your sets hard and keep going through the whole workout.
The heart is your most important muscle. You need to look after it
Low-impact cardio like incline walking is good for older people.
Everything I've mentioned is things everyone should be doing anyway, but most don't when their younger, as they can get away with it. Everyone should be using good technique, not ego lift, don't continue an exercise that hurts, look after your joints, do cardio, mobility, and warm up correctly.
It just becomes essential when you're older!
I hope that if you take anything from reading this, it will be there you can still train hard, you just have to do things correctly.
It just becomes essential when you're older!
I hope that if you take anything from reading this, it will be there you can still train hard, you just have to do things correctly.