Last updated: March 2026 | Reading time: 8 min
Table of Contents
Step 1: Programme for a PR 📊
PRs don't happen by accident. They're the result of a well-structured training block that builds strength progressively and peaks at the right time. A basic 8-week PR programme:
- Weeks 1–3: Volume phase — 4x6 at 70–75% of current max. Build work capacity.
- Weeks 4–6: Intensity phase — 4x4 at 80–85%. Build strength.
- Week 7: Peaking — 3x3 at 87–90%. Sharpen the nervous system.
- Week 8: Deload — reduce volume by 50%. Let fatigue dissipate.
- Week 9: PR attempt.
Also read: How to Break a Squat Plateau
Step 2: Peak Properly 📈
Peaking is the process of reducing fatigue while maintaining fitness. The goal: arrive at your PR attempt with maximum strength expression and minimum accumulated fatigue.
- Reduce volume by 40–50% in the final week
- Maintain intensity — don't reduce the weight, reduce the sets
- Prioritise sleep and nutrition in the final week
- Avoid new exercises or movements in the final 2 weeks
Step 3: Get Your Equipment Right 🔧
PR day is not the day to discover your shoes are wrong. Your footwear is the foundation of your squat — get it right before PR day.
Also: Magnesium powder for grip. Read: How Magnesium Powder Improves Your Grip
Step 4: The Perfect Warm-Up 🔥
Your warm-up for a PR attempt should be longer and more thorough than a normal session. Build up gradually:
- Empty bar: 2 sets of 5
- 50% of PR attempt: 1 set of 3
- 65%: 1 set of 2
- 75%: 1 set of 1
- 85%: 1 set of 1
- 92–95%: 1 set of 1 (your final warm-up)
- Rest 5–8 minutes
- PR attempt
Read: Best Warm-Up Routine for Weightlifters
Step 5: Choose Your Attempt 🎯
The most common PR failure: going too heavy. Choose a weight that is:
- 2–5% above your current PR
- A weight you've come close to in training
- Not a weight you've never been near
A 2.5kg PR is still a PR. Don't let ego choose your attempt weight.
Step 6: Execute 💪
- Take your time setting up — don't rush
- Take a big breath before unracking
- Walk out controlled — don't waste energy
- Set your stance, brace hard, and descend with control
- Drive out of the hole with everything you have
- Don't celebrate until you've stood up completely
Step 7: Mindset 🧠
The mental side of a PR attempt is as important as the physical. Strategies that work:
- Visualise the lift: See yourself completing it before you attempt it
- Use a pre-lift routine: Same music, same chalk application, same setup every time
- Aggressive intent: Approach the bar with the intention of destroying it, not surviving it
- Trust your training: You've done the work. The PR is already earned.
Your next PR starts with the right foundation.
Competition-grade weightlifting shoes from Castiron Lift.
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Keep Reading
- How to Break a Squat Plateau
- 5 Reasons Your Squat Is Suffering
- How to Prepare for Your First Competition
- Best Warm-Up Routine
External: IPF | PubMed — Strength Peaking Research