Hey CompoundTalk fam! I'm a certified personal trainer (NASM-CPT, Precision Nutrition L1) and about 40% of my current clients are on GLP-1 medications. I've spent the past 18 months refining a resistance training approach specifically for this population and wanted to share what's working.
The Problem: Most generic "beginner lifting programs" don't account for the unique challenges GLP-1 users face — reduced energy on injection days, potential nausea with high-exertion exercises, faster weight loss that can accelerate muscle loss, and often a starting point of very limited lifting experience.
My Recommended 3-Day Full Body Program:
Day A (e.g., Monday):
- Goblet Squat — 3x8-12
- Dumbbell Bench Press — 3x8-12
- Cable Row — 3x10-12
- Romanian Deadlift — 3x8-10
- Overhead Press — 2x10-12
- Plank — 3x30-45sec
Day B (e.g., Wednesday):
- Leg Press — 3x10-15
- Lat Pulldown — 3x8-12
- Incline DB Press — 3x10-12
- Leg Curl — 3x10-12
- Face Pulls — 3x15
- Pallof Press — 3x10/side
Day C (e.g., Friday):
- Bulgarian Split Squat — 3x8-10/leg
- Seated Cable Row — 3x10-12
- DB Shoulder Press — 3x8-12
- Hip Thrust — 3x10-12
- Bicep Curl / Tricep Extension superset — 2x12
- Dead Bug — 3x8/side
Key principles:
- Progressive overload is king. Add weight or reps every 1-2 weeks. Track everything.
- Schedule around injection days. Most people feel worst 24-48hrs post-injection. Train on your "good" days.
- Compound movements first. You have limited energy — spend it on the big lifts that recruit the most muscle.
- Don't skip legs. Lower body has the largest muscle groups. More muscle = higher BMR = better long-term results.
Happy to answer questions! 🏋️♀️