This article is part of the Castiron Lift Compete series — built for lifters who are done just training and ready to perform when it counts.
You've completed the training block. The numbers are moving, you've entered your next Powerlifting Australia, GPC, or Powerlifting NZ competition, and now comes the part most Oceania lifters get wrong — the peak. How you structure the final 12 weeks, how you select your attempts, how you manage meet week, and how you show up mentally on the day will determine whether you hit a lifetime total PR or leave kilograms on the platform.
This guide is built for intermediate and advanced competitors across Australia and New Zealand who already understand the basics. We're going deep: peaking block periodisation, attempt selection frameworks, water cut protocols, meet week programming, and the mental prep systems used by elite lifters. If you're competing in Oceania and want to maximise your total, this is the most complete resource you'll find.
For gear that supports your competition performance, see our powerlifting shoes — built for the platform, competition-legal under Powerlifting Australia and GPC rules. Ships from our China warehouse to Australia and New Zealand.
Why Most Lifters Peak Wrong
The most common peaking mistake isn't going too heavy — it's going too hard, too late. Lifters who crush PRs in training two weeks out from a meet almost never replicate that performance on the platform. The nervous system doesn't work that way. Fatigue masks fitness, and the goal of a peaking block is to systematically remove fatigue while preserving — and then expressing — the strength you've built.
The second most common mistake is treating meet week like a deload. It's not. Meet week is a precision activation protocol. You're not resting — you're priming. There's a significant difference, and understanding it is what separates lifters who go 8/9 on attempts from those who bomb out on openers they've hit a hundred times in training.
Research published on PubMed consistently shows that strength expression is maximised when accumulated fatigue is reduced while training specificity is maintained — not when volume is simply slashed. Your peaking block needs to be structured, not improvised.
The 12-Week Peaking Block Structure
Phase 1 — Accumulation (Weeks 1–4)
Volume phase. Build work capacity, reinforce technique under moderate load. Intensity stays at 70–80% of competition max, volume is high.
- Squat: 4–5 sets of 4–6 reps at 70–80% — competition stance, competition depth, powerlifting shoes every session
- Bench: 4–5 sets of 4–6 reps at 70–80% — competition grip, full pause per Powerlifting Australia rules
- Deadlift: 3–4 sets of 4–5 reps at 70–80% — competition style only (conventional or sumo)
- Accessories: High volume — Romanian deadlifts, pause squats, close-grip bench, rows, face pulls
- RPE target: 7–8 — hard but never maximal. Leave 2–3 reps in the tank.
Key principle: Everything is competition-specific. Every rep should look like a Powerlifting Australia competition rep — commands included. No technique variations.
Phase 2 — Intensification (Weeks 5–8)
Volume drops, intensity climbs to 80–90%. Converting work capacity into maximal strength expression.
- Squat: 3–4 sets of 2–4 reps at 80–90%
- Bench: 3–4 sets of 2–4 reps at 80–90%
- Deadlift: 2–3 sets of 2–3 reps at 80–90%
- Accessories: Reduced — keep only what addresses your specific weaknesses
- RPE target: 8–9
Key principle: Trust the percentages. A 90% triple in week 8 is exactly where you need to be. Save heavy singles for the peaking phase.
Phase 3 — Peaking (Weeks 9–11)
Sharpening phase. Volume drops significantly, intensity climbs to 90–97.5%. Heavy singles and doubles — but never true maximal attempts.
- Squat: 2–3 heavy singles at 90–95%, one top single at 95–97.5% in week 10
- Bench: 2–3 heavy singles at 90–95%
- Deadlift: 1–2 heavy singles at 90–95%
- Accessories: Minimal — upper back, core only
- RPE target: 9 on top sets — hard but technically perfect
Key principle: Your opener on meet day should be the heaviest single you lift in the entire 12-week block. Everything in training is preparation — not performance.
Phase 4 — Meet Week (Week 12)
Low volume, high specificity, full nervous system activation. You are not resting — you are priming.
| Phase | Weeks | Intensity | Volume | Primary Goal |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Accumulation | 1–4 | 70–80% | High | Work capacity, technique reinforcement |
| Intensification | 5–8 | 80–90% | Moderate | Strength conversion |
| Peaking | 9–11 | 90–97.5% | Low | CNS priming, fatigue removal |
| Meet Week | 12 | 60–80% | Very Low | Activation, nervous system readiness |
Attempt Selection Strategy
Attempt selection is where Powerlifting Australia and GPC meets are won and lost. A conservative, well-structured attempt strategy gives you nine opportunities to build momentum and hit a PR total.
The Opener — Your Most Important Attempt
- Target: 90–93% of your realistic competition max
- Rule: If you have any doubt about making the opener, it's too heavy. Drop it.
- Powerlifting Australia/GPC timing: One minute from when your name is called to begin the lift. Practise this in training.
- Commands: Practise squat, bench, and deadlift commands until they're automatic. Missed commands are free red lights.
The Second Attempt — Building Your Total
- Target: 97–100% of your realistic competition max
- Decision rule: If your opener felt harder than expected, stay conservative. If it flew up, push slightly higher — but never more than 5kg above your planned second.
The Third Attempt — Your PR Opportunity
- Target: PR attempt — typically 102–107% of your previous best
- Rule: Never change your third to something you haven't hit in training. PRs happen — miracles don't.
- Oceania strategy: If you're in a close total battle at a GPC Oceania or Powerlifting Australia National qualifier, your handler needs to track competitor attempts. Protect your total first if needed.
| Lift | Opener | Second | Third |
|---|---|---|---|
| Squat | 90–93% | 97–100% | PR attempt |
| Bench | 90–93% | 97–100% | PR attempt |
| Deadlift | 90–93% | 97–100% | PR attempt |
Weight Cutting for Powerlifting Australia, GPC, and Powerlifting NZ Competitors
Done correctly, a modest water cut allows you to compete in a lower weight class without sacrificing strength. The honest answer for most Oceania lifters: cut as little as possible, or don't cut at all.
Powerlifting Australia 24-hour weigh-in: Powerlifting Australia uses a 24-hour weigh-in at most sanctioned competitions. Confirm with your specific meet director.
GPC Oceania: GPC events vary — confirm weigh-in timing with your meet director before planning any cut.
Powerlifting NZ: Check the specific event rules with Powerlifting New Zealand directly.
| Timeframe | Action | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 7 days out | Reduce sodium, increase water to 6–8L/day | Water loading phase |
| 3–4 days out | Reduce carbohydrates to deplete glycogen | Each gram of glycogen holds ~3g water |
| 24–36 hours out | Reduce water to 1–2L/day, low sodium | Never go to zero water |
| Post weigh-in | Electrolyte drink, begin carb reload | 500ml electrolyte drink first, food within 30 min |
| Meet morning | Light, familiar foods only | Nothing new on meet day |
Meet Week Programming
Monday — 6 Days Out
Short, sharp session. Squat to a moderate single at 75–80%. Bench a few sets of 2–3 at 70%. No deadlifts. 45 minutes maximum. Leave feeling activated, not fatigued.
Tuesday — 5 Days Out
Active recovery only. Walk, light mobility, foam rolling. No barbell. Sleep is training today.
Wednesday — 4 Days Out
Optional opener simulation. Work up to your opener on squat and bench only. Single rep, full competition commands, full kit. Confidence session, not training.
Thursday — 3 Days Out
Rest. Mobility only. Begin carb loading if cutting. Pack your kit bag: singlet, powerlifting shoes, belt, knee sleeves or wraps, wrist wraps, deadlift socks, chalk, handler's details, meet schedule. Check equipment against the Powerlifting Australia approved equipment list tonight.
Friday — Weigh-In Day
Weigh in. Rehydrate immediately. Eat familiar foods. Review attempt selection. Confirm opening attempts are submitted. Sleep 8+ hours.
Saturday — Meet Day
Wake up 3–4 hours before your first attempt. Familiar meal. Arrive with time to warm up without rushing. Work backwards from your opener to plan every warm-up set.
| Warm-Up Set | % of Opener | Reps | Timing Before Opener |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bar only | — | 5 | ~60 min |
| Set 1 | 50% | 3 | ~50 min |
| Set 2 | 65% | 2 | ~40 min |
| Set 3 | 80% | 1 | ~25 min |
| Set 4 | 90% | 1 | ~15 min |
| Final warm-up | 95–97% | 1 | ~8 min |
Mental Prep for Competition Day
Visualisation Protocol
In the 2–3 weeks before competition, spend 10 minutes daily on structured visualisation — specific, sensory-detailed mental rehearsal of your competition lifts. Research from PubMed on motor imagery consistently shows that mental rehearsal activates the same neural pathways as physical practice. It is training.
Pre-Lift Routine
Develop a consistent pre-lift routine in training and execute it identically on the platform. Whatever it is, it needs to be automatic by meet day.
Managing Nerves
Pre-competition anxiety is a performance resource, not a problem. Reframe anxiety as readiness. The nerves mean you care. Use them.
Equipment Checklist for Powerlifting Australia, GPC, and Powerlifting NZ Meets
Check this list against the current Powerlifting Australia technical rules, GPC rulebook, and Powerlifting NZ rules before every competition.
- Singlet — federation-approved brand and fit
- Powerlifting shoes — competition-legal heel height. Our Castiron Lift lifting shoes are competition-legal — ships from our China warehouse to Australia and New Zealand.
- Belt — maximum 10cm width, single prong or lever, approved material
- Knee sleeves or wraps — confirm your division and check the approved brands list
- Wrist wraps — confirm maximum length for your federation and division
- Deadlift socks — mandatory, must cover shins completely
- Chalk — confirm with meet director
- Spare equipment — backup belt, spare wraps, extra singlet
External Resources
- Powerlifting Australia — official technical rules, competition calendar, and membership
- Global Powerlifting Committee (GPC) — GPC Oceania competition resources and rulebook
- Powerlifting New Zealand — NZ federation, events, and membership
- Barbell Medicine Blog — evidence-based programming and peaking resources
- PubMed — peer-reviewed research on strength training, peaking, and competition prep
Written by T-K