These are the two most recommended beginner-to-intermediate strength programs on the internet. They both work. They both produce real results. And they are fundamentally different in almost every way that matters.
Choosing between them isn't about which is "better" — it's about which matches where you are right now, what you can recover from, and what your goals actually are. This is that breakdown.
The core philosophy of each program
Stronglifts 5×5 (by Mehdi Sadramoghadam) is built on linear progression: add weight every session, every week, until you can't. It uses an A/B split — Workout A (Squat, Bench, Row) and Workout B (Squat, OHP, Deadlift) — and the goal is to keep adding 5 lb per session until you stall. When you stall, you deload and try again.
5/3/1 (by Jim Wendler) is built on a 4-week wave cycle with autoregulation built in: Week 1 you hit a set of 5 at a given percentage, Week 2 hits 3, Week 3 hits 5/3/1 (a 5 then a 3 then a single that exceeds your working weight), and Week 4 is a deload. After every 4-week cycle, you add 5 lb to upper body lifts and 10 lb to lower body lifts.
A sample week compared
Assume a lifter with a 225 lb bench, 315 lb squat, 405 lb deadlift, and 135 lb OHP:
| Stronglifts 5×5 — Week sample | |
|---|---|
| Day A — Squat 5×5 @ 275 | Day B — Squat 5×5 @ 275 |
| Bench 5×5 @ 205 | OHP 5×5 @ 115 |
| Row 5×5 @ 185 | Deadlift 1×5 @ 365 |
| 5/3/1 — Week sample (using 90% training max) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | 65% × 5, 75% × 5, 85% × 5+ | Week 2 | 70% × 3, 80% × 3, 90% × 3+ |
| Week 3 | 75% × 5, 85% × 3, 95% × 1+ | Week 4 | 40% × 5, 50% × 5, 60% × 5 (deload) |
The wave loading visual
Here's what the 4-week intensity wave looks like for a single exercise:
When each program shines
Stronglifts is great when:
- You're brand new to barbell training (less than 6 months)
- You respond well to high frequency (you squat 3×/week)
- You want to build confidence and consistency before thinking about percentages
- Your recovery is solid: you're sleeping 8 hours, eating enough, managing stress
5/3/1 is great when:
- You've been lifting for 6+ months and have stalled on linear progression
- You need more fatigue management — you're working, stressed, older than 28
- You want a program with built-in variety (Boring But Big, Widowmakers, Joker sets)
- You care about multiple rep ranges, not just grinding heavy singles
Who stalls when — and why
Stronglifts stalls typically hit around:
- Squat: 275–315 lb (men), 135–185 lb (women) — usually 6–12 months in
- Bench: 185–225 lb — often the first major plateau
- Deadlift: 365–405 lb — later but harder when it comes
When you stall on Stronglifts, the prescription is simple: deload 10%, reset, run it again. And again. Most people can get 2–3 resets before the program stops working entirely. After that, you need something more advanced.
5/3/1 rarely "stalls" in the same way. The autoregulation built into the AMRAP sets means you're always leaving reps in reserve on week 1 and 2, so you have room to push on week 3. The programming creates its own fatigue management through the deload week. Trained lifters who run 5/3/1 consistently report steady progress over years, not months.
When NOT to run either program
Don't run Stronglifts if:
- You're already doing more than 3 training days per week (it needs the recovery)
- You have joint pain or recurring injuries (the high frequency can expose weak links)
- You're an advanced lifter (you'll run out of linear progression in weeks)
Don't run 5/3/1 if:
- You're a true beginner (the percentage-based approach requires knowing your actual 1RM)
- You want simple — 5/3/1 has a lot of moving parts (TM, BBB, FSL, Joker sets)
- You're training for a sport that requires higher frequency on specific lifts
The honest comparison
| Dimension | Stronglifts 5×5 | 5/3/1 |
|---|---|---|
| Squat frequency | 3× per week | 1–2× per week (varies by template) |
| Progression model | Linear: +5 lb/session | Waved: +5 lb/cycle (4 weeks) |
| Fatigue management | None — you push every session | Built-in deload week every 4 weeks |
| Starting point | Empty bar is fine | Needs accurate training max (90% of 1RM) |
| Beginner friendly? | Very — simple, predictable | Less so — requires more planning |
| Long-term viability | Stalls typically within 6–18 months | Years of steady progress possible |
| Time per session | 45–60 min | 60–90 min (if doing BBB accessory) |
| Recovery demand | High — 3 full-body sessions/week | Moderate — 3–4 days, less volume per session |
| Best for | New lifters, fast gains, simplicity | Intermediate+ lifters, fatigue management, longevity |
Recommendation
If you're reading this and you have less than 6 months of serious barbell training under your belt: start with Stronglifts 5×5. It's simple, it works, and the fast progression is genuinely motivating. Run it until you stall twice and can't recover the weight.
If you're reading this and you've been lifting for 6+ months, or you recently stalled on a linear progression program: start with 5/3/1. Use the standard 4-day template with Boring But Big as your supplemental work. Give it 3 full cycles before you judge whether it's working.
If you've been running 5/3/1 for more than a year and you're still progressing: you already know this stuff. Keep going.
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