The answer is simpler than you think — and probably different from what you’ve heard.
You’ve probably heard it before: “Do 3 sets of 10.” Or maybe someone at the gym told you high reps are for toning and low reps are for bulking. Or that you need to be in the gym five days a week to see real results. Maybe you remember doing circuits in the ’90s and wondering why nothing ever changed.
Here’s the truth: most of what people “know” about building muscle was passed down like a game of telephone — gym-floor folklore with very little science behind it. The good news? The actual research is both simpler and more empowering than the myths.
Let’s clear the air.
First, Why Does Building Muscle Matter After 40?
Before we get into sets and reps, it’s worth asking: why bother?
After age 40, the average person loses roughly 1% of their muscle mass per year — a process called sarcopenia. That doesn’t sound like much until you do the math. By 60, you could have lost 20% of the muscle you had in your prime. That loss shows up as slower metabolism, reduced strength, more joint pain, worse balance, and a higher risk of injury from everyday activities.
The single most effective countermeasure? Strength training. Not cardio. Not stretching. Lifting weights — done consistently and intelligently — is the most evidence-backed way to preserve and rebuild lean muscle tissue at any age.
We see this play out every day working with adults across Connecticut — in Farmington, West Hartford, Wallingford, and New Milford. The people who commit to a structured personal training program are the ones who feel and move better five years from now. So yes, this matters. Let’s talk about how to actually do it.
The Myth of “3 Sets of 10”
The “3 sets of 10” recommendation has been around since the 1940s, when a physician named Thomas DeLorme used it to rehabilitate injured soldiers. It worked. It spread. And somehow, 80 years later, it’s still the default advice — at gyms in West Hartford, at fitness centers in Farmington, in every well-meaning but outdated recommendation — despite decades of research showing a much broader picture.
Here’s what the science actually says:
Muscle grows when it’s challenged — repeatedly, over time. The specific number of reps per set matters less than most people think, as long as you’re working close to your limit. Studies consistently show that sets of 5 reps, 10 reps, or even 20–30 reps can all produce similar muscle growth — if the effort is high enough.
What matters far more is:
- Total weekly volume — the overall amount of work you do for each muscle group
- Proximity to failure — how hard you push each set
- Progressive overload — gradually increasing the challenge over time
- Consistency — showing up week after week
So How Many Sets Do You Actually Need?
For most adults just starting out or returning to training, 10–20 sets per muscle group per week is the research-supported sweet spot for building muscle. That might sound like a lot, but spread across 2–3 training sessions, it’s very manageable.
Here’s a simple way to think about it:
If you’re a beginner or returning after a long break, start with 10 sets per week for each major muscle group — legs, back, chest, shoulders. Your body is highly responsive to new stimulus, so you don’t need much to start seeing results.
As you build a base over several months, you can gradually increase toward 15–20 sets per week for areas you want to prioritize.
More than that? Usually not necessary — and often counterproductive. Recovery matters just as much as training. Overtraining is a real thing, especially for adults over 40 who have jobs, families, stress, and less-than-perfect sleep. A good personal trainer helps you find that line and stay on the right side of it.
What About Reps?
The practical answer: anywhere from 5 to 30 reps per set can build muscle, as long as you’re working with enough effort.
That said, for most adults over 40, a rep range of 8–15 per set tends to be the best balance of effectiveness and joint-friendliness. Here’s why:
- Very heavy, low-rep training (1–5 reps) can be hard on joints — and if your shoulders, knees, or back aren’t what they used to be, there’s no reason to go there.
- Very high rep training (20–30 reps) works, but it’s metabolically demanding and can feel miserable, which makes it hard to sustain.
- The 8–15 range lets you challenge the muscle without grinding your joints, and the sets feel productive without leaving you completely wrecked.
The key phrase in all of this: “working with enough effort.” Doing 3 sets of 12 with a weight you could lift 25 times does almost nothing for muscle growth. The weight needs to feel genuinely challenging — like you could only do 1–3 more reps before you’d have to stop. That’s what drives adaptation.
This is also one of the biggest reasons working with a certified personal trainer matters. Knowing what “hard enough” actually feels like — and learning to train there safely — is a skill. It takes time to develop on your own. A coach can get you there in a fraction of the time.
The Real Variable Nobody Talks About: Progressive Overload
You can have the perfect rep range, the ideal number of sets, and a beautifully structured program — but if you’re not progressively making things harder over time, you will plateau.
This is where most gym-goers get stuck. They find a comfortable routine and repeat it indefinitely. The body is incredibly efficient. Once it adapts to a stimulus, it stops responding to it.
Progressive overload means:
- Adding a little more weight when a given load starts to feel easy
- Doing one more rep per set than you did last week
- Completing the same workout in less time
- Adding one more set to a given exercise
It doesn’t have to be dramatic. Even small, incremental progress — adding 5 pounds to a lift over the course of a month — compounds into real results over a year.
This is also why tracking your workouts matters. If you’re not writing anything down, you’re essentially starting from scratch every session. At our personal training studios in Farmington and West Hartford, every client’s program is tracked, logged, and adjusted over time — because that’s the only way to guarantee you’re actually moving forward.
Putting It Together: What a Realistic Week Might Look Like
For a 45-year-old in Wallingford or New Milford who hasn’t trained consistently in a while, a well-designed strength training program might look like this:
2–3 days per week, 45–60 minutes per session
Each session covers the major muscle groups — lower body, upper body push (chest/shoulders/triceps), and upper body pull (back/biceps). You’d do roughly 3–4 exercises per session, 3–4 sets each, in the 8–12 rep range, with effort that leaves you 1–2 reps short of failure by the end of each set.
That totals roughly 10–12 sets per muscle group per week — right in the evidence-based sweet spot — and leaves plenty of room for recovery.
Simple. Manageable. And it works.
Why “Winging It” Doesn’t Work
Here’s the hard part: knowing this information doesn’t automatically translate into results. The problem most adults run into isn’t lack of effort — it’s lack of structure.
Without a plan, most people do the same things they’ve always done (or the same things they see other people doing). They don’t progressively overload. They neglect certain muscle groups without realizing it. They train inconsistently. Or they start aggressive programs that aren’t sustainable and burn out after a few weeks.
Having a knowledgeable personal trainer or strength coach in your corner changes everything. Not because the information is complicated, but because accountability, personalization, and smart progression make all the difference in the long run. This is true whether you’re walking into a gym in West Hartford for the first time or you’ve been training on and off in Farmington for years.
Ready to Build a Program That Actually Works for You?
At Active Health, we take a different approach to personal training in Connecticut. Our certified trainers and health coaches work alongside our physician-led team to design strength programs that are intelligent, evidence-based, and built around your body — your history, your goals, your limitations.
We serve adults across Connecticut from our locations in Farmington, West Hartford, Wallingford, and New Milford — and our approach goes beyond what you’d find at a typical gym. Personal training here means a real program, real accountability, and a team that actually knows who you are.
Whether you’re starting from scratch, coming back after years away, or just tired of spinning your wheels, we’ll build a strength training program that makes sense for where you are right now and gets you to where you want to be.
Visit us at www.acthealth.org to learn more about our personal training programs and membership options, or to schedule a conversation with our team.
You don’t have to figure this out alone — and you definitely don’t have to rely on gym floor mythology anymore.
Active Health is a physician-led health and wellness practice with personal training locations in Farmington, West Hartford, Wallingford, and New Milford, Connecticut — integrating primary care, health coaching, and personal training under one roof.



