Opinions on the best way to train for hypertrophy are mixed. But in general, the traditional approach has been to grind away doing somewhere in the range of three to five sets for each exercise, anywhere between eight to fifteen reps per set.
The idea is that volume = growth. Meticulously counting out reps, and clocking enough sets and enough time in the gym to stimulate muscle adaptations.
But a growing chorus is now indicating a different approach could work just as well (or even better): two hard sets per exercise, taken to or near failure.
This is potentially great news for people who are fed up with 90-minute sessions that leave you feeling wrecked, on top of demanding you spend half your week in the gym. It may be possible to get the same results by concentrating effort into a smaller number of sets.
So, does the “two sets to failure” method hold up? Let's look at what the evidence says and when this approach makes sense.
What is “Two Sets to Failure” All About?

The idea is self-explanatory. For each exercise, instead of counting out X number of reps over three to five sets, you focus on just two sets, each taken to the point where you can't complete another rep with good form.
Some people train to absolute muscular failure, where the bar stalls mid-rep and won't budge. Others train to what's called technical failure, which means stopping when your form breaks down but you might grind out one more ugly rep if you wanted to. Both count for this approach.
Overall, your session might include four to six exercises covering the muscles you want to train, two working sets each, with a proper warm-up. You're in the gym 30-45 minutes instead of 90, but every set counts.
Does Two Sets to Failure Work? What the Research Tells Us
While there’s not necessarily that much research done specifically on two sets to failure routines, there is a decent amount on the benefits of volume vs effort, and whether it’s better to put up big numbers in volume or aim for concentrated, high-effort workouts.
Let’s take a look at a few notable findings.
Volume Has Diminishing Returns
A 2017 meta-analysis by Brad Schoenfeld found a clear dose-response relationship: more weekly sets produced more hypertrophy. But the gain per set was small, about 0.37% extra hypertrophy per additional weekly set, and the curve flattens out.
Here’s what that means in plain terms: going from three weekly sets per muscle to ten is a massive upgrade. Going from 10 to 20 is a smaller upgrade, and going higher than that delivers less and less.
If you're training each muscle twice a week with two sets per exercise and one to two exercises per muscle group, you're already in the optimal weekly sets range. For most people, that's enough to drive meaningful growth, especially if the effort is high.
Effort Is the Multiplier
The key to low-volume training is to ensure each set goes further.
A 2024 meta-regression by Robinson and colleagues found that hypertrophy improves as sets are terminated closer to failure. Strength gains were similar across a wide range of effort levels, but growth responds to effort.
Earlier research from Schoenfeld and colleagues also showed that hypertrophy is similar across a wide range of loads (anywhere from 30% to 85% of your one-rep max) as long as you train close to failure. Effort, not load, drives the stimulus.
The takeaway: two sets taken within two or less reps of failure will give you mostly the same result as a higher number of sets, where you finish each set with more left in the tank.
When Low-Volume Goes Head-to-Head With High-Volume
A 2016 study by Giessing and colleagues compared a high-intensity training (HIT) group (single sets to failure with drop sets) against a traditional three sets per exercise group. Both trained twice a week for 10 weeks.
The HIT sessions averaged 10.5 minutes. The traditional sessions ran 24-27 minutes.
The results? The HIT group had significantly greater strength gains in three of nine exercises and larger effect sizes in eight of nine. Body composition changes slightly favored the HIT group too.
One study isn't the final word, but combined with the broader dose-response and effort research, it reinforces the same conclusion: hard, low-volume work holds its own against higher-volume traditional training for strength and muscle.
Potential Benefits of Two Sets to Failure

The main takeaway of the research presented above is that low-volume, high intensity training is not clearly “better” than the higher-volume training, in absolute terms.
Yet what it does show is that you can get roughly the same results from either approach. And that means, if you’re not losing anything from doing fewer sets and a less structured regimen, some potential ancillary benefits.
You Spend Half as Long Training
Two working sets per exercise (instead of three to five) means you’re spending less time on each exercise, and less time overall working out.
Instead of a 90 minute workout, you could get the same results in 35-45 minutes. For many people, with less patience or less time available, having to dedicate less time to each workout makes a massive difference.
You Recover Faster Between Sessions
Higher-volume training creates more systemic fatigue. You feel more beaten up, sleep takes a hit, your legs still ache two days later, and you start skipping sessions because of it.
Low-volume training is easier to bounce back from. You can train more frequently without burning out, and you have more left in the tank for the rest of your life: work, family, and any conditioning or sports you do outside the gym.
You Actually Stick With It
Consistency is one of the biggest predictors of long-term progress. The best program is the one you'll keep doing for months and years, not the one that looks best on paper.
Shorter, less draining sessions are easier to commit to when you've slept poorly, when work is slammed, or when your motivation is at 60% instead of 100%.
Over a year, the lifter who completes 95% of a low-volume plan will usually out-progress the one who completes 70% of a high-volume one.
Who This Approach Works For (And Who It Doesn't)
Two sets to failure is a strong fit for most lifters in the middle of the bell curve, but it's not the right call for everyone.
It's a Good Fit If You:
-
Have limited gym time (30-45 minute sessions)
-
Are getting back into lifting after a layoff
-
Are an intermediate lifter who wants to cut junk volume
-
Are older and recover more slowly than you used to
-
Are in a maintenance phase, not actively chasing maximum muscle gain
-
Find yourself skipping sessions because workouts feel too long or exhausting
It's Probably Not Ideal If You:
-
Are an advanced bodybuilder chasing the last few percent of muscle gain
-
Enjoy longer workouts and recover well from them
-
Have specific goals that require high volume, like chasing a specific physique outcome or sport-specific hypertrophy
-
Can't push yourself close to failure (the whole thing falls apart if you're not willing to work hard)
For most lifters in the middle (people who want to build and maintain muscle, get stronger, and stay healthy without dedicating their lives to training), two hard sets per exercise gets the job done.
Building a Two Sets to Failure Workout Plan

So what does a workout routine, running the two sets to failure approach, look like? What changes versus a traditional workout split?
Here are some tips on exercise selection, rep ranges, rest, frequency, and how to progress over time.
Anchor Each Session With Compound Lifts
The bulk of your work should be multi-joint lifts that hit a lot of muscle at once. Squats, deadlifts, bench press, overhead press, rows, pull-ups. These give you the most growth per set.
Then add targeted isolation work for anything you feel needs extra attention (arms, shoulders, calves, whatever), aiming for four to six exercises in each session.
Pick a Rep Range You Can Push Hard In
Aim for a moderate rep range, typically six to twelve reps per set. You can go heavier (fewer reps) on big compound lifts if strength is your priority, or lighter (and more reps) on isolation work if you want to spare your joints.
Reps and weight are not super important, though. The key is getting close to failure, and that can be done with a variety of rep/weight combinations.
Rest Long Enough to Go Hard Again
Go for two to three minutes’ rest between sets. You need to be fully recovered to push hard on your second set.
Don't skimp on this. Rest periods matter more than most people think for hard training.
Hit Each Muscle Twice a Week
Train each muscle group twice a week. With two working sets per exercise and one or two exercises per muscle group per session, you'll hit four to eight weekly sets per muscle, which lines up well with the lower end of the effective volume range.
A simple template could be:
-
Monday: Upper body
-
Tuesday: Lower body
-
Thursday: Upper body
-
Friday: Lower body
Alternatively, a push-pull-legs split, going for three or four workouts per week.
Add Reps or Weight Every Week
Track your lifts. Aim to add reps or weight over time.
Whether you do high-volume workouts or high-intensity, low-volume, progressive overload is still the driver of long-term growth. Just because you're doing fewer sets doesn't mean you get to stay at the same weights forever.

Final Thoughts: Is Two Sets to Failure the Way to Go?
Everyone’s looking for the definitive “best” way to train. Truth is, there’s no secret “unlock” that’s going to magically 10x your results.
There are, however, effective ways to structure your workouts so that you can get solid results in less time, which can have a real impact on your ability to maintain a consistent workout habit.
And that’s the most important part of getting (and staying) in good health and great shape. Being consistent, and continuing to do the work, week in week out.
If a shorter, “two sets” workout routine helps you do that, then it’s absolutely worth doing.





