Reading time: 10 minutes · Last updated: June 2026
Table of Contents
- Why Programme Design Matters
- Periodisation — The Foundation
- The 16-Week Block Structure
- Volume and Intensity — How to Manage Both
- The Weekly Training Split
- Peaking for a Meet
- Deload Protocols
- Accessory Work for Powerlifters
- Common Mistakes UK Lifters Make
- FAQ
- Related Articles
📊 Why Programme Design Matters
Random training produces random results. The difference between a lifter who adds 20kg to their total in a year and one who stagnates is almost always programme structure — not effort, not genetics, not equipment.
For British Powerlifting and British Weightlifting competitors, a well-designed programme does three things: it builds the physical capacity to lift more, it peaks that capacity at the right time, and it manages fatigue so you arrive at the platform fresh and ready to express what you’ve built.
Research published in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research confirms that periodised training produces significantly greater strength gains than non-periodised training across all experience levels.
🔄 Periodisation — The Foundation
Periodisation is the systematic variation of training stress over time. It prevents accommodation, manages cumulative fatigue, and ensures peak performance arrives at the right moment — meet day.
- Linear periodisation: Progressive weekly increases in intensity with decreasing volume. Simple, effective for beginners and intermediates.
- Block periodisation: Distinct training phases (hypertrophy → strength → peaking) each with a specific adaptation target. Most effective for intermediate to advanced lifters.
- Daily undulating periodisation (DUP): Variation of volume and intensity within each week. Effective for advanced lifters with strong recovery capacity.
For most British Powerlifting and British Weightlifting competitors, block periodisation is the most practical and effective model.
🏗️ The 16-Week Block Structure
| Block | Weeks | Volume | Intensity | Goal |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypertrophy | 1–4 | High | 60–75% 1RM | Build muscle mass and work capacity |
| Strength | 5–10 | Moderate | 75–90% 1RM | Convert hypertrophy to maximal strength |
| Peaking | 11–14 | Low | 85–97% 1RM | Express maximal strength, reduce fatigue |
| Deload + Meet | 15–16 | Very Low | 60–70% 1RM | Recover, sharpen, compete |
📈 Volume and Intensity — How to Manage Both
Volume is the total amount of work performed — sets × reps × load. It drives hypertrophy and work capacity. Too much volume too close to a meet accumulates fatigue that masks strength.
Intensity is the percentage of your 1 rep max being used. High intensity trains the nervous system to express maximal force. The relationship is inverse: as the meet approaches, volume decreases and intensity increases.
| Phase | Weekly Sets per Lift | Rep Range | % 1RM |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hypertrophy | 12–20 sets | 5–8 reps | 60–75% |
| Strength | 8–14 sets | 3–5 reps | 75–90% |
| Peaking | 4–8 sets | 1–3 reps | 85–97% |
| Deload | 3–5 sets | 2–3 reps | 60–70% |
🗓️ The Weekly Training Split
| Day | Focus | Primary Lifts | Accessory |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monday | Squat | Competition squat, pause squat | Leg press, Romanian deadlift, core |
| Wednesday | Bench | Competition bench, close-grip bench | Dumbbell press, rows, tricep work |
| Thursday | Deadlift | Competition deadlift, deficit deadlift | Good mornings, lat pulldowns, core |
| Saturday | Upper Accessory | Overhead press, incline bench | Face pulls, curls, rear delt work |
📅 Peaking for a Meet
Key peaking principles:
- Reduce volume, not intensity. Keep weights heavy but cut total sets and reps significantly.
- Maintain competition specificity. Squat to depth, pause on the bench, use competition commands in training.
- Taper over 2–3 weeks. A 1-week taper is too short for most lifters.
- Final heavy session 10–14 days out. After that, maintain sharpness with moderate intensity.
🔄 Deload Protocols
When to deload:
- Every 4–6 weeks during the hypertrophy and strength blocks
- The week before a meet
- Any time accumulated fatigue is masking performance
Deload protocol:
- Reduce volume by 40–60% (cut sets, not reps)
- Maintain intensity at 60–70% 1RM
- Keep movement patterns identical to competition lifts
- Prioritise sleep, nutrition, and mobility during deload week
💪 Accessory Work for Powerlifters
| Weakness | Lift Affected | Best Accessory |
|---|---|---|
| Weak out of the hole | Squat | Pause squat, box squat, leg press |
| Weak lockout | Squat, Deadlift | Good mornings, Romanian deadlift, hip thrust |
| Weak off the chest | Bench | Pause bench, dumbbell press, floor press |
| Weak triceps | Bench | Close-grip bench, JM press, tricep pushdowns |
| Weak off the floor | Deadlift | Deficit deadlift, Romanian deadlift, leg press |
| Upper back rounding | Deadlift, Squat | Barbell rows, lat pulldowns, face pulls |
⚠️ Common Mistakes UK Lifters Make
Training too heavy too often. Maximal effort every session is not a programme — it’s a path to injury and stagnation. Reserve true maximal effort for competition.
Ignoring the hypertrophy block. The hypertrophy block builds the muscle mass that the strength and peaking blocks convert into competition performance. Skip it and you’re building on a smaller foundation.
Not peaking properly. Arriving at a meet fatigued from heavy training the week before is one of the most common errors. The deload and taper are not optional.
Neglecting accessory work. Weak points in the squat, bench, and deadlift are almost always addressable with targeted accessory work.
🏋️ Build the Programme. Execute the Plan.
The programme builds the strength. Your lifting shoes express it on the platform. Castiron Lift — built for British Powerlifting and British Weightlifting competitors. Ships to the UK from our international warehouse.
→ Shop Lifting Shoes — UK Shipping Available
❓ FAQ
How long should a powerlifting programme be?
12–16 weeks is the standard competition prep cycle. Shorter cycles work for more experienced lifters. Beginners benefit from longer base-building phases before peaking.
How many days a week should a powerlifter train?
3–4 days per week is optimal for most intermediate and advanced lifters.
What is a deload week?
A planned reduction in training volume (40–60% cut in sets) while maintaining movement patterns and moderate intensity. Performed every 4–6 weeks and the week before a meet.
Should powerlifters do hypertrophy training?
Yes. Muscle mass is the raw material that strength training converts into competition performance.
How do I peak for a powerlifting meet?
Reduce volume significantly over 2–3 weeks while maintaining intensity. Final heavy session 10–14 days out. Deload the week before the meet.
📚 Related Articles
- Meet Day Strategy — UK
- Mobility and Flexibility for Powerlifters — UK
- Sleep and Recovery for Strength Athletes — UK
- Protein for Powerlifters — UK
- Training Programme Design — USA Version
Written by T-K — Brand Strategist, Castiron Lift