GZCLP Program Guide — The Best Beginner-to-Intermediate Powerlifting Programme for European Lifters

GZCLP Program Guide — The Best Beginner-to-Intermediate Powerlifting Programme for European Lifters

Reading time: 11 minutes | Last updated: May 2026

GZCLP is one of the most recommended beginner-to-intermediate powerlifting programmes — and for good reason. Created by powerlifter Cody Lefever, it uses a three-tier training structure that develops strength across all major lifts simultaneously. This is the complete guide for European lifters across the Netherlands, Scandinavia, and Europe, with weights in kg and IPF/EPF competition context throughout.

Table of Contents

  1. What Is GZCLP?
  2. The Three-Tier Structure
  3. 4-Day Training Schedule
  4. Progression in kg
  5. Footwear for GZCLP
  6. GZCLP & IPF/EPF Competition
  7. Honest Pros & Cons
  8. Who It’s For — Who It’s Not For
  9. The Research Behind the GZCL Method
  10. FAQ

📋 What Is GZCLP?

GZCLP stands for GZCL Programme for Linear Progression. Created by powerlifter Cody Lefever, it applies his GZCL training method to linear progression — adding weight every session as long as you hit your rep targets. The key innovation over simpler programmes is the three-tier structure — training multiple lifts at multiple intensities in every session.


🎯 The Three-Tier Structure

GZCLP Tier Structure Chart

GZCLP’s three-tier structure: T1 (heavy), T2 (moderate), T3 (light/accessory)

Tier Intensity Rep Scheme Purpose
T1 High (85–95%) 5 sets of 3, last set AMRAP Max strength
T2 Moderate (65–75%) 3 sets of 10 Hypertrophy, volume
T3 Light (50–60%) 3 sets of 15+ Accessories, weak points

Schoenfeld (2010) in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research demonstrated that training across multiple rep ranges produces superior strength and hypertrophy adaptations — the scientific basis for GZCLP’s tier structure.


🗓️ 4-Day Training Schedule

Day T1 T2 T3
A Squat 5x3+ Bench 3x10 Lat pulldown 3x15+
B OHP 5x3+ Deadlift 3x10 Dumbbell row 3x15+
C Deadlift 5x3+ OHP 3x10 Leg press 3x15+
D Bench 5x3+ Squat 3x10 Face pulls 3x15+

📈 Progression in kg

Lift T1 Increment T2 Increment
Squat +5kg/session +2.5kg/session
Deadlift +5kg/session +2.5kg/session
Bench Press +2.5kg/session +1.25kg/session
OHP +2.5kg/session +1.25kg/session

👟 Footwear for GZCLP

  • Squat T1 and T2 days: Weightlifting shoes (~€170–€220) recommended for high-bar squatters and beginners with limited ankle mobility. Free EU shipping, no import costs.
  • Deadlift T1 and T2 days: Flat shoes or deadlift slippers.
  • Bench and OHP days: Any flat shoe.

See our Best Squat Shoes 2026 — Europe guide for recommendations at every price point.


🏅 GZCLP & IPF/EPF Competition

  • GZCLP is an excellent starting point for European lifters considering IPF or EPF competition — it builds all four competition lifts plus OHP.
  • After 3–6 months on GZCLP, transition to 5/3/1 or nSuns as a base programme, then use a competition peaking block 8–12 weeks before your first meet.
  • Nordic federation lifters (NPF, SPF, DPF, FPF) and KNKF follow IPF equipment rules — weightlifting shoes are approved for competition squat.

✅ Honest Pros & Cons

Pros Cons
✅ Trains all four main lifts every week ❌ More complex than Starting Strength
✅ Builds strength and hypertrophy simultaneously ❌ 4 days/week required
✅ Built-in failure protocol ❌ No built-in deload
✅ Free — no book or app required ❌ Sessions run 60–75 minutes

🎯 Who It’s For — Who It’s Not For

✅ Who it’s for

  • European lifters who have completed 3–6 months of linear progression and want more structure
  • Dutch and Scandinavian beginners who want to train 4 days per week from the start
  • Anyone considering IPF or EPF competition in the next 6–12 months

❌ Who it’s not for

  • Complete beginners with no barbell experience
  • Lifters who can only train 2–3 days per week
  • Advanced lifters — move to nSuns or Sheiko

📚 The Research Behind the GZCL Method

  • Schoenfeld (2010), Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research: Training across multiple rep ranges produces superior strength and hypertrophy adaptations.
  • Ralston et al. (2017), Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research: Higher weekly training volume produces greater strength gains in intermediate lifters.
  • Aaberg (2007), Resistance Training Instruction: Linear progression is the most effective approach for novice and early-intermediate lifters.

FAQ

How long should I run GZCLP?
Until linear progression stalls on both T1 and T2 — typically 3–6 months. Then transition to 5/3/1 or nSuns.

What’s a good starting weight in kg?
Start at 60–70% of your estimated 1RM on T1 lifts. You’ll progress quickly in the first few weeks.

Do I need weightlifting shoes for GZCLP?
For squat days: recommended for beginners with limited ankle mobility. Free EU shipping available.

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Written by T-K — Creative Director & Brand Strategist, Castiron Lift.

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