A solid gym full-body workout trains your major muscle groups in one session by combining compound lifts (moves that work multiple joints) with a small amount of targeted accessory work. It’s a practical option if you can only make it to the gym two to four days per week, because each workout covers legs, push, pull, and core.
Start with 5–8 minutes of light cardio and dynamic warmups (leg swings, arm circles, bodyweight squats). Then use this structure:
Squat or leg press: 3 sets of 6–10 reps. Rest 90–120 seconds. Choose a weight that leaves 1–2 reps in the tank on each set.
Bench press or dumbbell press: 3 sets of 6–10 reps. Keep your shoulder blades pulled back and down, and control the lowering phase.
Lat pulldown or assisted pull-up: 3 sets of 8–12 reps. Focus on pulling your elbows down and back instead of yanking with your hands.
Romanian deadlift or hip thrust: 3 sets of 8–12 reps. Maintain a neutral spine and move through your hips, not your lower back.
Plank: 2 rounds of 30–45 seconds, then farmer’s carries: 2 rounds of 30–60 seconds. These build bracing strength that supports every lift.
Use a weight you can lift with clean form across all sets. When you can hit the top of the rep range for every set (for example, 3×10), increase weight slightly next time (typically 2.5–10 lbs depending on the lift). If time is tight, pair non-competing moves as supersets (like pulldowns with planks).
For more exercise options, substitutions, and a longer breakdown, visit https://agathin.com/what-is-a-full-body-workout-i-can-do-at-the-gym/.
Most people do well with 2–4 full-body sessions per week. Leave at least one rest day between harder workouts so your muscles and joints can recover.
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