Monday, 6 July 2026

Who Should Use Rest-Pause Training? Strength Coaches Explain the Pros and Cons

Every guy runs into it eventually: The program that’s been working for months starts to feel stale. You’re showing up, your form’s solid, but the numbers on the weight stack or the dumbbells in your hands haven’t moved in a while.

So, you start with the basics. Change an exercise variation. Tighten your execution. Take a harder look at recovery. Those adjustments handle plenty of stalls and give you a better shot at making the work you’re already doing count.

Once you’ve made those changes and the next clean rep still isn’t there, a small change in training method can help. Rest-pause training changes how you approach a single hard set. For men who train hard but don’t want to live in the gym, it’s a practical way to make an existing workout more productive. Rest-pause can provide a different hypertrophy stimulus without piling more standard sets onto your week.

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How Rest-Pause Training Can Help When Progress Stalls

How the Method Works

“Rest-pause training is a technique where a lifter performs a set close to failure, rests briefly (typically 10-30 seconds), and then performs additional mini-sets with the same load,” says Harrison Schreiner, CSCS. 

While traditional sets allow for long rest periods to flush the lactic acid from your muscles, rest-pause training keeps the pressure on by striking again before full recovery. This traps blood and metabolic waste to maximize the deep fatigue that forces growth. 

Why Those Extra Reps Matter for Muscle Growth

Progress can show up in more places than added weight. The extra reps you complete after the first hard effort can become a new training marker. Start by recording the total reps you get throughout the sequence, then aim to increase that number over time while you maintain steady form.

Chase Overpeck, MA Exercise Physiology, CSCS, points to mechanical tension as a key driver of muscle growth. “The leading driver of hypertrophy is mechanical tension,” he says. Hard reps near the end of a demanding set usually require the most from the target muscle. Brief rests give you enough recovery to continue working with the same load for a few more reps.

Schreiner says those brief rests partially restore ATP and phosphocreatine, giving you a little more capacity for the next mini-set. That’s useful when you want a bigger training effect from an exercise already in your program.

Rest-Pause vs. Cluster Sets

Cluster sets also use brief rest within a larger set, but they’re commonly programmed to maintain bar speed, power output, and technical quality during heavier work. Schreiner gives the example of an athlete completing two squat reps, resting 15 to 20 seconds, then repeating that sequence until he reaches 10 total reps.

Rest-pause begins with a set pushed near muscular failure. That makes it a strong fit for hypertrophy work on controlled accessory exercises.

Related: Stop Grinding Through Failed Sets. Use This Wave Loading Strategy to Break Your Bench and Squat Plateaus

How to Perform Rest-Pause Training 

Pick a Load You Can Control

Start with a load you could handle for roughly 8 to 12 hard reps. Overpeck says a challenging starting set can range from 6 to 15 reps, depending on the movement. Still, most guys will find the 8 to 12 range manageable for machine and cable exercises.

A load that lets you barely grind out four or five reps won’t leave you much to work with after the first pause. You should have enough left to add mini-sets without seeing your technique come apart immediately.

Use a Short Reset Between Mini-Sets

For a straightforward first run, use this setup:

  1. Push the first set until you have zero to one reps in reserve.
  2. Rest for 15 to 20 seconds.
  3. Complete two to five additional reps.
  4. Rest for another 15 to 20 seconds.
  5. Complete another two to five reps.
  6. Add a final mini-set only if you can keep the reps controlled.

Schreiner recommends two to three mini-sets in total for most guys because “this structure allows the lifter to accumulate more effective reps while maintaining reasonable technique and training quality,” he says.

What a Rest-Pause Set Looks Like

Let’s say you’re on a machine chest press with a load you can handle for about 10 hard reps. You hit those 10 reps close to failure, rest for 20 seconds, get four more, rest another 20 seconds, then finish with three more controlled reps.

That gives you 17 total reps with the same weight, including several reps that come after the point where a normal straight set would’ve ended. Your exact breakdown will change depending on the exercise and load, but the basic idea stays the same: start with a hard set, take a brief reset, then add a few more quality reps while the target muscle is still working under fatigue.

Where Rest-Pause Training Works Best

Machines, Cables, and Isolation Work Give You More Room to Push

Rest-pause gets challenging fast, so exercise selection matters. Choose movements with a predictable setup and an easy stop point. Machine presses, supported rows, cables, and single-joint work all fit well.

“Because of the proximity to failure with rest-pause, it’s a method I’d reserve for more controlled exercises like machine work where there are better safety mechanisms or single joint isolation work where failing doesn’t compromise you or the gym equipment,” Overpeck says.

Good options include:

  • Machine chest press
  • Leg press
  • Seated cable row
  • Lat pulldown
  • Machine shoulder press
  • Leg extension
  • Seated leg curl
  • Cable lateral raise
  • Dumbbell curls
  • Triceps pushdowns

Keep Your Heavy Barbell Work Traditional

Barbell back squats, front squats, conventional deadlifts, Olympic lifts, heavy good mornings, and heavy bent-over rows all demand a lot from your setup once fatigue climbs. Rest-pause can make positioning and bracing the limiting factors before the target muscle gets adequate work.

“As fatigue accumulates, technique often deteriorates before the target muscle is fully challenged, which can increase technical failure and decrease repetition quality,” Schreiner says.

Use standard straight sets and full rest periods for those lifts. Cluster work can fit into strength and power training because it helps preserve bar speed and positioning over a greater amount of work.

Related: Is Training to Failure Draining Your Nervous System? Why Chasing Fatigue Might Be Sabotaging Your Gains

How to Use Rest-Pause Without Overdoing It

Save It for Your Final Set

Build your normal sets as written, then put rest-pause on the final set of an accessory exercise. That gives you a clear way to track progression and see how the extra effort affects your recovery.

Start with one rest-pause exercise for a muscle group you want to bring up. Schreiner says most guys can keep it to one to three accessory movements per session, though one or two is plenty when you’re first trying it. Overpeck also recommends reserving it for the end because the mini-sets can get demanding.

Keep the Rest of Your Workout Simple

Keep normal rest periods between standard sets, and continue progressing your primary lifts using conventional loading and rep targets. Rest-pause has a focused job: to give a lagging area more meaningful work at the end of a session.

“Rest-pause training is best reserved for lagging body parts you feel aren’t making enough progress from typical volumes of training,” Overpeck says. Pull it back when you’re progressing normally again.

The method loses value when every mini-set turns into an ugly failure or your rest periods stretch into standard breaks. Stick to the short windows and leave enough in the tank to recover before your next session.

A Two-Day Rest-Pause Training Plan

Use these as separate upper- and lower-body sessions during a hypertrophy-focused block. Most of the work stays standard. Rest-pause appears only on the final set of one or two controlled accessory movements.

Use the rest-pause sequence above on the final set of each marked exercise. Finish the initial set with zero to one reps in reserve, rest 15 to 20 seconds, then complete two to five additional reps. Repeat for another mini-set, adding a third only when your rep quality stays strong.

Upper-Body Rest-Pause Workout

Standard Sets

  1. Machine Chest Press: 3 sets of 8 to 12 reps
  2. Seated Cable Row: 3 sets of 8 to 12 reps
  3. Machine Shoulder Press: 3 sets of 8 to 12 reps

Rest 2 to 3 minutes between sets of the chest press and cable row. Rest about 90 seconds to two minutes on the shoulder press.

Rest-Pause Sets

  1. Cable Lateral Raise: 3 sets of 12 to 15 reps

Use rest-pause only on the final set.

  1. Cable Curl or Triceps Pushdown: 3 sets of 10 to 15 reps

Use rest-pause only on the final set.

Rest 60 to 90 seconds between your first two sets on these exercises. Once you begin the final set, use only the 15- to 20-second breaks between mini-sets.

Lower-Body Rest-Pause Workout

Standard Sets

  1. Leg Press: 3 sets of 10 to 12 reps
  2. Romanian Deadlift: 3 sets of 8 to 10 reps
  3. Calf Raise Machine: 3 sets of 12 to 15 reps

Rest two to three minutes between sets for the leg press and Romanian deadlift. Give calf raises, 60 to 90 seconds of rest between sets.

Rest-Pause Sets

  1. Seated Leg Curl: 3 sets of 10 to 15 reps

Use rest-pause only on the final set.

  1. Leg Extension:  3 sets of 12 to 15 reps

Use rest-pause only on the final set.

Keep the rest of the workout straightforward. The rest-pause sets add a little more high-effort work to controlled exercises, while the bigger lifts stay easy to track and progress.

Related: This Simple Warmup Routine Takes Less Than 10 Minutes and Reduces Chronic Knee Pain, Trainer Says

Experts

  • Harrison Schreiner, CSCS, Owner/Head Coach at RPM Strength and Conditioning
  • Chase Overpeck, MA Exercise Physiology, CSCS

Sources

  1. Korak, J Adam et al. “Effect of rest-pause vs. traditional bench press training on muscle strength, electromyography, and lifting volume in randomized trial protocols.” European journal of applied physiology vol. 117,9 (2017): 1891-1896. doi:10.1007/s00421-017-3661-6
  2. Iversen, Vegard M et al. “No Time to Lift? Designing Time-Efficient Training Programs for Strength and Hypertrophy: A Narrative Review.” Sports medicine (Auckland, N.Z.) vol. 51,10 (2021): 2079-2095. doi:10.1007/s40279-021-01490-1
  3. Enes, Alysson et al. “Rest-pause and drop-set training elicit similar strength and hypertrophy adaptations compared with traditional sets in resistance-trained males.” Applied physiology, nutrition, and metabolism = Physiologie appliquee, nutrition et metabolisme vol. 46,11 (2021): 1417-1424. doi:10.1139/apnm-2021-0278
  4. Prestes, Jonato et al. “Strength and Muscular Adaptations After 6 Weeks of Rest-Pause vs. Traditional Multiple-Sets Resistance Training in Trained Subjects.” Journal of strength and conditioning research vol. 33 Suppl 1 (2019): S113-S121. doi:10.1519/JSC.0000000000001923


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