What is Detraining?

Close up photo of a man stretching his foot on the stairs-detraining

Definition

Detraining refers to periods of reduced training volume and intensity after a period of consistent training. It typically involves taking a break from your normal workout routine.

Explanation

  • Detraining periods give your body and mind a chance to recover from intense training. This helps prevent overtraining, burnout, and injuries.
  • Complete rest is not necessary. You may reduce training frequency, sets, reps, or load. The key is lowering volume and intensity significantly.
  • Short detraining periods of 1-4 weeks let you recover without significant strength or muscle loss. Longer periods lead to detraining effects like decreased endurance, strength, and muscle mass.

Examples

  • Taking 1 week off after 12 weeks of hardcore training
  • Cutting your 5-day per week program to 2-3 days for a month
  • Doing light cardio and mobility work instead of heavy lifting for a few weeks

Related Terms

  • Active recovery, rest days, recovery week, regeneration, periodization
  • Overtraining, overreaching, burnout

Common Questions

  • How long can I detrain before losing gains? Detraining effects happen after about 4 weeks.
  • What should I do during detraining? Light activity like walking, yoga, and mobility work. Avoid complete rest.
  • Is detraining necessary? It’s highly recommended before overtraining occurs. Periodic detraining prevents burnout.

Do Not Confuse With

  • Active recovery – Lower intensity training days during a normal program
  • Rest days – Short 1-2 day breaks between training sessions
  • Offseason – Extended multi-month break from competitive sports
67 / 100

Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe to our free newsletter

!