A Guide To Using RPE In Your Training

Subscribe
Notify of

Got a question? Ask me below

Please keep questions on topic, write clearly, concisely, and don't post diet calculations.

guest
700

Privacy policy.

23 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
bob
bob
March 13, 2023 01:39

Hey Andy what should Rpe be when you are cutting?

dont you need to keep the weight heavy so you dont lose muscle?

Whenever i do rpe 8 when I am cutting i feel like that might detrimentally affect me.

Andy Morgan
Admin
Andy Morgan
March 14, 2023 08:03
Reply to  bob

Hi Bob,

The same as when bulking.

Your performance may drop when cutting (the load you can lift and the number of reps you can perform). By using the same RPE guideline, you match your load selection with your ability to perform.

Whenever I do RPE 8 when I am cutting, I feel like that might detrimentally affect me.
Don't overthink it.

Peter
Peter
August 25, 2022 01:48

Hello, I understand the very basic of RPE but progress from it. I’ve been following Get Started on Your First Body Building, Novice Bodybuilding and how to build program in 6 step templates. Been using it for about a year now and want to use RPE. I’m confused on how to progress.

If the program is 3×10@8RPE.
Set 1: 10 @8RPE
Set 2: 10 @9
Set 3: 8 @10

Next session do I increase resistance since I hit 1st set @8RPE or should I wait until I complete all 3sets at the required reps?

Andy Morgan
Admin
Andy Morgan
August 25, 2022 08:44
Reply to  Peter

Hi Peter, wait until you can get the target number of reps in all sets (10 reps in your example) while keeping to that first set RPE guideline. When you can do that, increase the load. Here’s our guide to progression, which I’m sure you know about, but I’ll post for others reading.

Peter
Peter
August 25, 2022 10:56
Reply to  Andy Morgan

Yes, I have. So follow these progression guides. I’ll reread them.

Thanks again.

Johnson Lee
Johnson Lee
April 24, 2021 00:29

Hi Andy, today I did some barbell bench press to failure on purpose just to get better at judging RPE. I completed 1 set of 7 reps at RPE 10. However, bar speed on the 7th rep was quite slow during the concentric phase ( ~3 seconds to complete the rep). Can I consider the 6th rep to be RPE 9 or 10?

Andy Morgan
Admin
Andy Morgan
April 25, 2021 11:56
Reply to  Johnson Lee

Hi Johnson, thank you for the question.

RPE is a measure of how many more reps you could get. As you got that 7th rep and you could get no more, the RPE of the set is 10, and if you had stopped at the 6th rep, then the RPE would be 9.

Johnson Lee
Johnson Lee
May 4, 2021 13:19
Reply to  Andy Morgan

Thanks for the answer. Last question: I have been bench pressing for a few years now and I have gotten quite good at estimating RPE on the bench press. Recently, I started to include squats and deadlifts in my program. Do you think the RPE estimating skill on my bench will carry over to the squats and deadlifts or I need to relearn the skill again on newer lifts? 

Andy Morgan
Admin
Andy Morgan
May 5, 2021 05:30
Reply to  Johnson Lee

There may be some transfer, yes.

Thank you for posting with your real name this time. It hasn’t gone unnoticed that you have posted 37 comments in the last year, all with different names.

Abdul Hafeez
Abdul Hafeez
March 30, 2021 16:58

Hi Andy, what is the guide (when, how, why etc. etc) to wear weightlifting belt, wrist straps & knee sleeves etc.? I couldn’t find such article on your site. If you have already written, kindly share link. Thanks

Andy Morgan
Admin
Andy Morgan
March 31, 2021 09:17
Reply to  Abdul Hafeez

Hi Abdul, thank you for the questions.

1. Wear a belt when only once you’re comfortable with your form, otherwise it can mask poor form and become a crutch. After that point, it may help you brace harder and lift more.
2. Use wrist wraps if your wrists give you issues despite troubleshooting your grip position.
3. I don’t know anything about knee sleeves.

Justin
Justin
September 28, 2020 09:35

Thank you Eric for a great article and to Andy for answering this question. With regard to using RPE to gauge our intensity, is there any guidance or research to your knowledge of that intensity being the more important factor for hypertrophy training with sets/frequency being equal? I ask in relation to how certain diet adjustments can cause earlier fatigue in lifting (i.e. Keto) or certain supplements improve performance slightly (creatine/caffeine)? If doing a low carb diet off supplements I lift 225×8 at RPE 8 twice a week on a bench vs a carb loaded training I can do 250×8 at RPE 8 twice a week, does the signal for hypertrophy change?

Thank you for your input!

Andy Morgan
Admin
Andy Morgan
September 29, 2020 09:58
Reply to  Justin

Hi Justin,

A lot of people talk about keto being “the tits” online, but the fact is, the body likes carbs to fuel training and the majority of people will find their lifting suffers without them. You have a clear sign that you do better on a higher carb diet, so I’d ditch the keto.

But if you’d like to test this more first, this article we wrote may interest you: How to Systematically Test if Keto is Right for You

Justin
Justin
September 29, 2020 20:51
Reply to  Andy Morgan

Thanks so much for the reply Andy! I agree with you, performance in the gym sans carbs is a handicap. This website has helped me change my physique at age 34 into the best shape of my life! Thanks to the whole team for all you do.

Andy Morgan
Admin
Andy Morgan
September 30, 2020 10:56
Reply to  Justin

Most welcome, Justin. 🙂

Wendy
Wendy
July 30, 2020 04:04

Great article and I am a big fan of dr. Eric’s work!

Is it normal that one cannot hit the same amount of reps for each set? E.g if 3×8 @8 RPE is prescribed with the same load, my reps will go: 8,7,6 or even worse, keeping RPE @8 each set. I am definitely not underestimating my first set RPE. Even if I would let my RPE go up it would be like 8 @8 RPE, 8 @10 RPE, 6 @10 RPE. To hit 8,8,8 with the same load, my first set would have to start @ or below 5 RPE, creeping up toward 8-9 RPE in my third set.

Could you explain how it is possible to hit the same reps for multiple sets with the same load, starting @RPE 8 and not hitting failure in final set when fatigue accumulates?! 

Thank you!

Andy Morgan
Admin
Andy Morgan
July 30, 2020 12:14
Reply to  Wendy

Hi Wendy,

Yes, absolutely. The RPE prescription is usually used for only the first set.

Wendy
Wendy
July 30, 2020 21:35
Reply to  Andy Morgan

Thank you for your reply! 🙂

I was still wondering though. If I do my first set @ RPE 8, I’ll instantly hit 8 @10 RPE the next set. The set after that I will miss reps, probably 6 @ 10 RPE, while my first set really was 8 RPE.

Andy Morgan
Admin
Andy Morgan
July 31, 2020 18:24
Reply to  Wendy

That is unusual, but if that’s the case, reduce the RPE for the first set as necessary.

Prateek Maggo
Prateek Maggo
August 19, 2020 18:19
Reply to  Andy Morgan

Thank you so much for writing such an informative article. This certainly helps me grow as an aspiring trainer. When you say RPE is used for just the first set, is that a rule I should follow for designing my programs? Currently, I vary the RPE for each set and maintain/increase/decrease it based on comfort with a movement, complexity (increase for isolation).

Thank you!

Andy Morgan
Admin
Andy Morgan
August 20, 2020 08:46
Reply to  Prateek Maggo

Not a rule, just a guideline to go with the sample programs on the rest of the site.

Tim
Tim
May 5, 2020 06:05

Great read, Eric. The topics and guidance were well organized and easy to understand. I just sent this to a friend of mine that I train with so we can begin to speak the same language when I give him pointers. Thanks for continuing to produce quality content for all of us!

Andy Morgan
Admin
Andy Morgan
May 5, 2020 07:59
Reply to  Tim

Thank you, Tim. I’ll pass this on to Eric. 🙂