Texas Method
What is the Texas Method?
The Texas Method is a 3-day per week intermediate strength program built around weekly progression on the main lifts. The structure uses three distinctly different sessions: a high-volume Monday, a recovery-focused Wednesday at lighter loads, and a high-intensity Friday where the trainee tests new 5-rep maxes on the main lifts. The weekly cycle drives strength gains for intermediate lifters who have outgrown session-to-session linear progression.
Who is the Texas Method for?
The Texas Method suits intermediate lifters who have completed a beginner linear-progression program (6 to 12 months) and have stalled session-to-session progress on their main lifts. The program assumes solid technique on the squat, bench press, overhead press, and deadlift; beginners without that foundation should complete a beginner program first. Advanced lifters typically need different programming structures than the Texas Method provides.
How is the week structured?
Monday (Volume Day): heavy 5-set work on squat, then bench press or overhead press at 5 by 5, then a back exercise. Wednesday (Recovery Day): light squat at 80 percent of Monday's load for 2 sets of 5, light overhead press or bench press at 5 sets of 5 with reduced load, then chin-ups or pull-ups. Friday (Intensity Day): work up to a new 5-rep max on the squat, then a new 5-rep max or 1-rep max on the press, followed by a deadlift max or near-max for 1 to 5 reps.
Volume Monday
The Monday session generates the bulk of the weekly training stress. Squat: 5 sets of 5 reps at roughly 90 percent of the previous Friday's 5-rep max. Press (alternating bench press and overhead press week by week): 5 sets of 5 at the same relative intensity. Pull or back work: 5 sets of 5 or 3 sets of 5 to 8. The total volume is high and intentional; it accumulates fatigue that the rest of the week processes.
Recovery Wednesday
The Wednesday session manages fatigue while maintaining movement frequency. Squat: 2 sets of 5 at 80 percent of Monday's load. The lighter version of the alternate press exercise. Chin-ups or other back accessory. The session is short and serves as a maintenance dose between the heavy days.
Intensity Friday
The Friday session tests progress and produces the peak strength stimulus. Squat: warm up to a new 5-rep maximum, beating the previous Friday's by 2.5 kilograms. Press: similarly progress 1 to 2.5 kilograms. Deadlift: 1 set of 5 reps or 1 to 3 reps at near-maximum, alternating week to week. The Friday's success determines the next week's Monday loads.
How do you progress on the Texas Method?
Weekly: each Friday's 5-rep max should exceed the previous Friday's by 2.5 kilograms on the squat and 1 to 2.5 kilograms on the presses. Monday's loads scale from these new maxes (90 percent of Friday's 5RM). The deadlift progresses every other week. When weekly progression stalls, the program transitions to a more advanced periodized structure (Madcow, 5/3/1, or others).
What are the strengths of the Texas Method?
The weekly progression structure suits intermediates who have outgrown daily linear progression. The clear volume-recovery-intensity rhythm maps directly onto the body's adaptation cycle. The 3-day schedule fits most working adults. The structure produces consistent strength gains for 6 to 18 months of running before stalls. The 5-rep max testing each Friday provides clear feedback on whether the program is working.
What are the limitations of the Texas Method?
The high Monday volume produces substantial fatigue; trainees with weak recovery capacity (older trainees, busy life schedules) sometimes cannot sustain the session. The program is strength-focused; trainees pursuing primarily hypertrophy benefit from different programming. The Friday intensity day is mentally demanding; trainees who psychologically struggle with weekly max attempts may dread Friday sessions. The program assumes consistent training; missing days disrupts the weekly progression cycle.
Frequently asked questions
What if I cannot progress weekly?
Three options. First, deload week (skip the planned increase, hold weights, restart progression the following week). Second, add an extra recovery day if Monday volume is too high. Third, transition to a different program; weekly progression stalls indicate the trainee has outgrown the Texas Method. Most lifters run the program for 6 to 18 months before transitioning.
Texas Method vs Madcow 5x5?
Madcow uses 5 sets across (with the same weight) on the volume day and progresses weekly through working up to a new top set Friday. The Texas Method uses 5 sets at the same weight Monday and tests new 5-rep maxes Friday. Both are intermediate programs with weekly progression; Madcow has slightly less weekly volume and is generally easier on recovery. Trainees often try both at different points.
How heavy should the volume Monday be?
90 percent of Friday's previous 5-rep max for the squat and presses, performed for 5 sets of 5. The number is deliberately demanding; the volume produces the strength stimulus that supports Friday's progression. Going lighter than 90 percent reduces the stimulus and slows progress; going heavier than 90 percent compromises Friday's testing.
Should beginners try this?
No. The weekly progression structure assumes the trainee has already completed a session-to-session linear progression program and stalled on it. Beginners who jump to the Texas Method waste their novice phase, where session-to-session progression produces faster gains. Complete a beginner program (Starting Strength, StrongLifts) for 6 to 12 months first.
Sample week at a glance
Squat 5 sets of 5 at 90% Friday 5RM, bench or overhead press 5 sets of 5, back accessory
Full rest or low-intensity active recovery
Light squat 2 sets of 5 at 80% Monday weight, light press, chin-ups or pull-ups
Full rest or low-intensity active recovery
Work up to new 5RM squat, new press 5RM, deadlift 1 set of 5 or near-max single
Full rest
Full rest
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