How Much Strength Training Do You Need After 40?
- Amanda Boike

- 2 days ago
- 8 min read
Updated: 2 days ago

By Amanda Boike Fitness
Many women already have a sense that strength training matters because they’re starting to notice changes in their bodies. They may feel a little less strong, a little less stable, or less confident in the way they move than they used to. And often, what they’ve been trying just isn’t giving them the results they want.
Usually, they fall into one of two groups: either they’re avoiding strength training because they’re worried about doing it wrong or getting hurt, or they’re doing a lot- long, sweaty workouts, cardio-heavy routines, and random classes- but still not seeing the muscle tone, strength, or confidence they’re working for.
The encouraging news is that building muscle after 40 does not require punishing workouts or pushing yourself to exhaustion. What it does require is a smarter, more supportive approach.
After 6 years as a personal trainer, I’ve worked with many women who want real results from strength training but do not want to get hurt in the process. Many of them have outgrown bootcamp-style fitness. They’re no longer interested in workouts that leave them drained, sore, and wondering whether any of it is actually working. They want a more effective way to build muscle, improve posture, and feel stronger in daily life.
And that is exactly where the right kind of strength training comes in.
The short answer
Most women after 40 do not need more exercise. They need the right dose of exercise.
For many women, that means training each muscle group 1 to 2 times per week on non-consecutive days, taking each set close to muscle failure, and eating enough protein to support muscle growth.
A practical way to think about it is this:
Train each muscle group 1 to 2 times per week
Stop most sets about 1 to 3 reps before failure
Use enough resistance that the set feels challenging in under 30 reps
Eat about 0.75 to 1 gram of protein per pound of body weight
That’s the foundation.
Not endless cardio. Not random classes. Not feeling wrecked after every workout. And definitely not pain.
The biggest myth about strength training after 40
The biggest misconception I see is that women think they need intense, sweaty workouts and very heavy lifting to get results.
That belief keeps a lot of women stuck.
Some avoid strength training altogether because they assume it has to be extreme or intimidating. Others do too much, believing that more sweat, more fatigue, and more soreness must mean better results.
But muscle building doesn’t work that way.
Muscle is built when you give it enough of the right kind of challenge, then allow it to recover and adapt. That’s why my approach focuses on the minimum effective dose of exercise needed to build muscle: not more, not less.
In other words, the goal is not to do as much as possible. The goal is to do what works.

What actually works
In my experience, women after 40 tend to do better with a more focused and supportive style of strength training.
That often means keeping workouts simple, targeted, and easier to recover from.
Train one muscle group at a time
For the women I work with, focusing on one muscle group at a time often works better than combining multiple muscle groups into big compound circuits.
Why? Because it makes the workout easier to control, easier to adjust, and easier to recover from. It also allows you to load the muscle more effectively without piling on unnecessary fatigue.
That matters, especially for women who are new to strength training or coming out of workout styles that left them feeling worn down.
Take your sets close to failure
To build muscle, the muscle has to be challenged enough to actually respond.
A useful rule of thumb is to finish most sets with about 1 to 3 reps in reserve. That means you could maybe do a few more reps, but not many.
This is one of the most important pieces. Many women are working out consistently, but they’re not getting close enough to muscle fatigue to create real change.
Use a weight that challenges you in under 30 reps
You do not need to lift the heaviest weights possible, but you do need enough resistance that the set feels meaningfully hard.
For many people, that means reaching fatigue in under 30 reps. If you can do endless repetitions without the muscle getting tired, the weight is probably too light to do much for muscle growth.
Give your body time to recover
Muscle is not built by doing more and more. It is built through the combination of training and recovery.
That’s why training each muscle group 1 to 2 times per week on non-consecutive days is often such a sweet spot. It gives the muscle enough stimulus to grow, without turning every week into a cycle of overdoing it and trying to catch up.
Eat enough protein
Strength training is only one side of the equation. If your goal is to build muscle, your nutrition has to support that goal too.
A helpful protein target for many women is about 0.75 to 1 gram per pound of body weight. That gives your body the raw materials it needs to repair and build muscle.
What tends to backfire
A lot of women assume they are not seeing results because they need to try harder. But often, the opposite is true. They need to stop doing the things that are draining energy without giving much back.
Here are a few things I commonly see backfire:
Too much cardio
Cardio can absolutely support overall health, but it is not what drives muscle growth. When women rely heavily on long cardio sessions or use cardio as the main form of exercise, they often end up tired without making much progress toward building muscle.
Combining strength and cardio into one exhausting workout
When the goal is muscle growth, trying to do everything at once can blur the training effect. Instead of giving the muscle a clear signal to grow, the workout becomes a lot of effort with less payoff.
Chasing soreness
Soreness is not proof that a workout worked. Pain is not a sign that you are doing it right. A good strength program should challenge you, but it should not leave you feeling wrecked, fearful, or unable to function the next day.
This is especially important for women who have been taught that exercise only “counts” if it leaves them drenched in sweat or barely able to sit down afterward. That is not a requirement for progress.
What I’ve seen with clients
The women I work with often come in wanting the same thing: they want to feel stronger, more capable, and more confident in their bodies again.
And when they shift away from all-or-nothing exercise and toward a more targeted, joint-friendly approach, the changes are often noticeable in ways that matter.
They feel stronger going up stairs.They move with more confidence.Their posture improves.They feel more stable.They stop associating exercise with burnout.They begin to trust that their bodies can get stronger without being punished.
Sometimes their husbands notice the posture changes before they do.
And just as important, they start to see aging differently. They stop assuming decline is inevitable and start experiencing what it feels like to build strength in a way that supports their life.
A real client example
One of my clients in her 60s had previously worked with a group gym program for about 18 months. It helped her get started, but over time it became repetitive, and she felt like she wasn’t really advancing anymore.
After working with me, what stood out most to her was that I was always paying attention to where she was that day. That made her feel safe, while still allowing her to be challenged.
Because she works a physically demanding job, she cannot afford setbacks. And yet, after more than a year of training together, she shared that she had never once been injured or even overly sore.
That is a big deal.
She also appreciated that when something hurt, especially her knees, I could modify the movement and still make the workout effective. And on days when she wasn’t up for more serious resistance training, I could draw from my background in Feldenkrais and mobility work so she could still leave feeling better in her body.
What stayed with me most was this: she said this work is changing her sense of what is possible in terms of thriving as she gets older.
That is exactly what good strength training should do.
So, how much strength training do you need after 40?
Enough to challenge your muscles.Enough to recover from. Enough to repeat consistently.
For many women, that means:
Training each muscle group 1 to 2 times per week
Taking sets 1 to 3 reps shy of failure
Using resistance that feels challenging in under 30 reps
Training on non-consecutive days
Eating enough protein to support muscle growth
That is often enough to create meaningful results. Not more chaos.Not more punishment. Not more sweat for the sake of sweat. Just enough of the right work, done consistently.

Stop waiting to feel ready
One of the biggest things I want women to stop doing is waiting until they feel “ready.”
You do not need to feel confident before you begin. You do not need to get in shape before starting strength training. And you do not need to know exactly what you’re doing before taking the first step.
What you need is a safe, effective place to begin.
Confidence usually does not come first. Experience does. When women feel what a supportive strength program is actually like, that is often when the fear starts to fade.
A better first step
The best place to start is not with the hardest workout you can survive. It is with a program that helps you feel what effective training actually feels like.
That is why I encourage women to take advantage of the programming in Amanda Boike Fitness Online. It is a simple way to experience the difference for yourself and feel what a safe, effective strength program can actually feel like.
You may not need to do more. You may just need to do what works.
FAQ
Is 2 days of strength training enough after 40?
Yes, for many women, 2 well-designed strength sessions per week can absolutely be enough to start building muscle and getting stronger. The key is that the workouts need to be challenging enough and done consistently.
Do I need to lift very heavy weights after 40?
Not necessarily. You do need enough resistance to challenge the muscle, but that does not always mean lifting the heaviest weights possible. What matters more is getting close enough to muscle fatigue.
Do I need to be sore after strength training for it to work?
No. Soreness is not required for progress. A workout can be effective without leaving you in pain or overly sore.
How many reps should I do to build muscle after 40?
A helpful guideline is to choose a resistance level that feels challenging in under 30 reps and to stop most sets about 1 to 3 reps before failure.
Is cardio enough to prevent muscle loss after 40?
No. Cardio can support heart health and overall wellness, but it is not enough on its own to build or maintain muscle mass. Strength training is what gives your body the signal to keep or build muscle.
How much protein do I need to build muscle after 40?
A useful target for many women is about 0.75 to 1 gram of protein per pound of body weight, especially when paired with regular strength training.
What if I am afraid of getting hurt?
That is exactly why the right program matters. You do not need to throw yourself into intense workouts. A well-designed program can help you build strength safely, gain confidence, protect joints (like the shoulders, low back and knees) and make steady progress without feeling overwhelmed.



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