Beginner full-body workout plan

A beginner full-body workout plan that builds the habit

New to the gym? You don't need a six-day split. Three full-body sessions a week, built around the basics done well, is how you get strong, fit and consistent — without burning out or guessing what to do.

Why full-body, three days a week, is right for a beginner

As a beginner you make fast progress from frequent practice of the main movement patterns — push, pull, squat, hinge and carry. Training them three times a week as full-body sessions beats a body-part split that hits each muscle only once.

It also fits a real life: three sessions leave recovery days between them, so you show up fresh, build the habit, and actually keep going.

Built to progress without overwhelming you

Each session starts with a warm-up, moves into the main lifts, and finishes with focused accessory work — enough to drive progress, not so much that you dread it.

You log what you did, and your coach guides when to add a rep, when to add load, and when to take an easier week. Clear next steps, every session.

A real beginner plan

A real full-body plan, built by your coach

This is an actual plan from a GetMyCoach coach — read why it's built this way, then see the first weeks day by day. Yours is built around your goal, your gym and your schedule.

Example plan
Your coach

General Fitness Coach

General fitness coach

Hi - I'm your General Fitness Coach. We'll build a realistic plan that helps you feel stronger, fitter and more confident in your training. I coach balanced everyday fitness: full-body strength, conditioning, mobility and core work, matched to your equipment, schedule and experience. I help you train consistently, improve movement quality, build useful strength and develop better fitness without overwhelming you.

Training starts with a calibration week to find realistic effort levels. Then the plan builds through simple full-body strength, conditioning, mobility and core work. Progression is gradual: reps before load, conditioning density over time, and deloads every fourth week to protect recovery.

1

Consistency over perfection

2

Full-body strength as the base

3

Conditioning that supports, not destroys, progress

Why this plan

Why this plan fits you

Goal
General fitness
Experience
Beginner
Training days
3 / week
Equipment
Barbell & plates area, Dumbbells, Adjustable bench, Cable tower, Lat pulldown, Leg press, Pull-up bar, Floor space for mat work

This plan is built for your goal: General Fitness. It's matched to beginner experience and 3 training days a week, so the workload fits where you are now. and uses the equipment you have (running shoes, barbell, dumbbells and adjustable bench). General Fitness Coach tuned the volume so progress stays steady.

Your split

Why your week is built this way

You're training a Full-body strength A / Conditioning Intervals / Full-body strength B split. Grouping the week this way lets each muscle group be trained hard, then fully recover before its next session.

1Full-body strength A

A balanced hit of your whole body so nothing is left behind.

2Conditioning Intervals

Short, sharp efforts to build top-end fitness.

3Full-body strength B

A balanced hit of your whole body so nothing is left behind.

Exercise choices

Why these exercises

Training starts with a calibration week to find realistic effort levels. Then the plan builds through simple full-body strength, conditioning, mobility and core work. Progression is gradual: reps before load, conditioning density over time, and deloads every fourth week to protect recovery.

Progression

How you'll get stronger

Progressive overload

As a beginner, your body will adapt quickly to the challenges we set. We'll focus on gradually increasing the weight you lift with your barbell and dumbbells, adding an extra rep, or improving your form over time. This steady, custom progression is how you'll consistently build strength and fitness.

For example

When the work starts to feel easier, add reps inside 8–12, then a small amount of weight — only when your form and recovery stay solid.

Each set lists an RPE/RIR target — how many reps you should have left in the tank. Higher RPE means closer to failure; it keeps your effort honest without guessing.

Rhythm

Frequency & recovery

Why this many days

You selected 3 training sessions per week tuned to your goal and coach guidance.

Rest & recovery

Recovery is just as vital as your training days for building a strong foundation. Your rest days are crucial for muscle repair and growth, so make sure to prioritize them. We'll also include lighter weeks periodically to give your body a chance to fully recover and come back stronger.

Day by day

The first 4 weeks, day by day

Browse each week day by day — rest days included, so you see the full rhythm.

AI Coach Assistant

Ask about your session, swap an exercise, or change your week

Your week

Rest day — nothing scheduled.

Rest day

No session scheduled. Use this day for recovery, mobility, or light activity.

Frequently asked questions

I've never trained before — is this safe to start with?
Yes. The plan starts at a sensible volume with movements scaled to your level, and your coach progresses you gradually. Begin lighter than you think and earn each step up.
Why only three days a week?
Because for a beginner it works. Three full-body sessions hit everything with enough frequency to progress, while leaving recovery days that keep you consistent. You can add days later as you adapt.
Do I need a full gym?
This plan assumes a gym, but your own plan is built around what you have — a full gym, a few dumbbells at home, or bodyweight. The structure stays the same; the exercises adapt.
Is it free?
Yes — GetMyCoach is free during early access. Build a plan and start training, no invite needed.

This is an example plan for illustration only — it is not medical advice and is not personalized to your injuries, limitations, or training history. Build your own plan to get coaching tailored to you.

Build your beginner plan

Answer a few questions and preview a full-body plan built around your level and your week — free during early access.