Most lifters have heard the phrase “train hard or go home.” But when it comes to building muscle, do you actually need to take every set to failure? Or is there a smarter way? Let’s break down how close to failure you should train for maximum hypertrophy.
Training to failure means performing a set until you physically cannot complete another rep with good form. It’s the point of complete muscular fatigue—also called momentary concentric failure.
But there’s a spectrum between stopping far from failure and going all the way:
The last 4–5 reps of a set are often the most “anabolic”—they create the most mechanical tension and motor unit recruitment. This means that to grow muscle, you need to train close to failure—but not necessarily hit it every set.
While training to failure can increase effort, it comes with tradeoffs:
Most lifters make better long-term progress training within 0–2 RIR for most working sets.
No. This leads to excessive fatigue and often reduces total training quality. Most sets should stop 1–2 reps shy of failure.
Start by videoing your sets and comparing bar speed. With practice, you’ll learn to gauge when you’re close to true failure.
It can—but only marginally, and often at the cost of recovery. A well-balanced program near failure is usually better than all-out effort every time.
Not inherently. But doing so frequently on barbell compounds (like squats or bench) increases risk if form breaks down.
You don’t need to annihilate yourself every session to grow muscle—you need to apply enough stimulus consistently. For most lifters, training within 0–2 reps of failure is the sweet spot: high effort, manageable fatigue, consistent progress.
Want to get more out of each rep? Read our guide on Best Rep Ranges for Muscle Growth to stack your sets the smart way.
Also recommended: PubMed – Resistance Training to Failure vs Not to Failure