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What Is a Deload Week? Complete Guide for Serious Athletes

deload week

Martijn de Jong |

Many people see a deload week as something for wimps or people who lack motivation. But honestly: most (serious) athletes who never deload, they eventually completely get stuck. Too heavy, too often, pushing through too long doesn’t work endlessly. Your body is not a machine, although it sometimes it feels like that when you’re in a full training flow. Your body is a large living organ that you you can’t keep pushing endlessly without it pushing back.

In this blog, I explain in a normal, explain in an understandable way what exactly a deload week is, why it works, how how to do it and when you need one. I also discuss deloads for bodybuilders, strength trainers, fitness enthusiasts, crossfitters, and powerlifters because there is a certain difference there too.

What is a deload week?

A deload week is a planned week (or shorter/longer) in which you reduce the load of your training. So you’re still training, but everything is put on a lower setting for a while. Less volume, less intensity, less stress on your joints, less strain on your nervous system to better recover and come back stronger.

You basically remove all the built-up fatigue away that your body can’t get rid of in a few normal rest days solve. A deload week is not a vacation or a week of doing nothing. It’s a conscious a planned recovery week so you can make progress again afterwards. (Pub Med, 2024)

What does that roughly look like

  • You do fewer sets
  • You train further from failure
  • You use lighter weights
  • You keep the movements neat and controlled
  • You don’t leave the gym out of breath or exhausted

A deload week feels almost too easy. But that’s exactly the point.

Why does deloading work?

If you train hard for weeks in a row, fatigue builds up. Not only in your muscles, but also in your tendons, joints and especially your nervous system. Many athletes think it’s mainly the muscles are the ones that get tired, but that’s only a small part of the story.

What really happens after weeks of intense training:

  • Your nervous system becomes overloaded
  • Your technique becomes sloppier
  • Your recovery gets worse and worse
  • Your muscles feel tired and tight
  • Your motivation slowly fades
  • Joints and tendons start to protest

This doesn’t happen overnight day. It’s a buildup. And you don’t get rid of that buildup with just one rest day or an early bedtime.

A deload week works because your body finally gets time to catch up on delayed recovery.

That hidden recovery feels often the biggest gain: you become sharper, stronger, and fresher

When do you need a deload week?

You don’t need a deload week every month as a standard deload week needed. But there are clear signals that your body needs a break needs.

Watch out for these kinds of things:

  • Weights that are normally easy feel suddenly heavy
  • Warm-ups already feel tiring
  • Your technique is no longer stable
  • Your motivation decreases
  • You get irritated more quickly
  • Your recovery takes longer than usual
  • Small aches get bigger
  • You are mentally “done” before you start your training
  • You feel stiff and slow, even with light exercises

If these kinds of signals pile up, it is a deload week is almost always a good idea. It’s much better to be a little early better to deload too early than too late, when you are already experiencing complaints or overreaching (overfatigue).

How often should you do a deload week?

This varies greatly per athlete, but there are are guidelines.

Average frequencies:

  • Beginners: often hardly needed, unless they do insanely high volume
  • Average athletes: every 6 to 8 weeks
  • Advanced: every 4 to 6 weeks
  • People who like to train to failure: more often than they want to admit
  • People who are cutting: usually need it sooner
  • People with a lot of stress outside training: also need it sooner

The ideal moment therefore depends on your recovery capacity, lifestyle, training volume, and how hard you really train. So it’s not necessary if advanced athlete definitely not every 4 to 6 weeks if you only train 2-3 times per week train when you are in a busy period and don’t train to failure, for example. (BELL, et al., 2025)

How do you do a deload week?

There are two ways to do a deload week can be tackled. Both work, but it depends on your sport, training style and how hard you train.

1. Reduce volume (recommended for almost everyone)

Volume is the biggest source of fatigue. Less volume means faster recovery, without your body completely going into sleep mode.

A deload through less volume means:

  • 40 to 60 percent fewer sets
  • Keep the same exercises
  • No training to failure
  • Lower RPE, around 5 or 6
  • Slower tempo
  • No intensive variants like drop sets, rest-pause, or forced reps

This is by far the best method for fitness enthusiasts, bodybuilders, strength trainers, and most recreational athletes

2. Lowering intensity (for powerlifters or people with CNS fatigue)

Sometimes it’s the load that breaks you, especially if you do a lot of heavy singles, doubles, and triples.

An intensity deload means:

  • Working at 50 to 60 percent of your 1RM
  • Low to moderate volume
  • Technical reps
  • No heavy pushing, pulling, or squatting
  • Gradual reduction of nervous system load

This works especially well for powerlifters who train a lot at high intensity.

Which way is better to deload?

For 90 percent of athletes, it works lowering volume is best.
For powerlifters, lowering intensity often works better.

Sometimes you do a mix: volume slightly down, intensity slightly down, but never both extremely at once. Then it becomes too light and feels like you’ve done a week of warm-up.

deload week

Deload week for bodybuilding, strength training, and fitness/gym

Because these three groups are quite similar training in terms of goal and style, you can easily combine them into one strategy to summarize.

What is the goal:

  • Relieving muscles
  • Letting joints and tendons recover
  • Reducing accumulated fatigue
  • Cleaning up technique
  • Setting up a new training phase

How do you approach a deload week for this group?

  • Keep the same exercises
  • Use about 50 to 60 percent of your normal volume
  • Stop your sets 3 to 4 reps before failure—no intensive techniques
  • No high RPE—no ego lifts—focus on smooth, tight reps
  • Slightly shorter workouts
  • No new exercises introduced

The idea is simple: you keep the movements warm, but removes all stress from your system.

Deload week for powerlifters

Powerlifters are a special category. Not because they train differently, but because the load on the nervous system is much higher. A few weeks of really heavy squatting, bench pressing, and deadlifting adds up huge because of this.

That’s why a deload for powerlifters looks something different.

How powerlifters often deload:

  • 50 to 60 percent of 1RM
  • Few sets, often 2 to 3 working sets per lift
  • No heavy triples, doubles, or singles
  • Slower tempo
  • No grind reps

For powerlifters, a deload is more about more about the nervous system than the muscles. Muscles are often fine, but the system behind it is tired.

Deload week for CrossFit

CrossFit is a different world because you have to do with intensity, impact, and volume all at once.

What does NOT belong in a CrossFit deload week:

  • No heavy WODs
  • No high-impact like burpees, box jumps, or double unders
  • No maximal lifts
  • No huge cardio peaks

What SHOULD be included:

  • Low intensity
  • Longer rest
  • Technical training (rings, handstand drills, etc.)
  • Light strength sessions
  • Calm steady metcons without peak heart rate

Crossfit demands a lot from your recovery, so Deloads occur more often here than in bodybuilding or normal strength training.

How should you eat during a deload week?

Many people make this mistake. They think: less training = less eating. But that’s not how it works.

During a deload week, a lot of recovery takes place. That takes energy. If you eat too little, recovery slows down and you get less out of your deload.

How to eat DURING a deload week:

  • Keep protein the same
  • Keep calories almost the same
  • Optionally 5 to 10 percent lower if you prefer that
  • Focus on good nutrition, less processed junk
  • Drink enough water
  • Extra vegetables and fruit is never wrong

How NOT to eat during a deload week:

  • No crash diet
  • No cutting 400 to 600 calories
  • No “I move less, so I should eat less” “eating less” mentality

A deload is not a cut week. It is a recovery week.

Common mistakes when deloading

  • Scaling back too much, so it becomes more like a vacation week
  • Not scaling back enough, so you’re not really deloading
  • Thinking you get weaker from a deload
  • Eating too little - drastically lowering volume and intensity at the same time
  • Doing the deload too short (2-3 days)
  • Random deloading without a plan
  • Letting ego get in the way

Deloading sometimes feels like you are going backwards go. In reality, you are actually building a buffer for progress.

Conclusion: what is a deload week?

A deload week is a planned a training week in which you consciously reduce the load. Not because you don’t feel like it you have it, but because your body needs a reset. By deloading you get Built-up fatigue is gone, you improve your recovery and come back stronger. And maybe But the most important thing: a deload week is not a sign that you are working less hard. It is a sign that you are working smart.