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Training guide

How to plan back-off sets after a top set

A top set tells you something about the day. Back-off sets turn that information into useful work without pretending there is one perfect drop for every lifter, lift, or block.

Best for

Lifters using top sets who want follow-up work that stays connected to the day's actual performance.

Decide what the top set means

Before lowering the weight, decide what the top set was supposed to prove. Was it a strength exposure, a technique check, or the heaviest work before volume?

If the top set moved as expected, the back-off work can usually stay close to the plan. If it was slower or messier than expected, the back-off load should give you more room.

Example: after a heavy set of 3 at 150 kg, a 10% drop gives 135 kg. That can be a useful starting point, but the set quality decides whether it is still right.

Choose the drop from the goal

A smaller drop keeps the work closer to the top set. A larger drop gives more room for cleaner reps, shorter rest, or extra volume.

Do not treat the drop as a universal rule. The right reduction depends on the lift, reps, fatigue, rest periods, and how close the top set was to failure.

Use a conservative first drop when the top set was a near max, a high-RPE set, or a lift that creates more fatigue for you.

Make the back-off sets loadable

After choosing the reduction, round the target to the plates or dumbbells available. A clean, repeatable load is more useful than a perfect spreadsheet number.

Use volume load only to compare similar back-off work, because the arithmetic cannot see technique, bar speed, rest, or how hard the sets felt.

Log the reason, not just the number

Record the top set, the back-off load, and why you chose it. After a few weeks, those notes reveal whether a 5%, 10%, or 15% drop tends to match the training goal.

Use Protocol to run the block and keep those session decisions attached to the routine instead of scattered across calculator tabs.

Use the calculator chain

Work the math in the open, then use Protocol to run the routine and keep progression attached to the session.

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