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Only Have 30 Minutes? This Strength Routine Still Builds Muscle & Strength

Ava Durgin
Author:
July 18, 2025
Ava Durgin
Assistant Health Editor
By Ava Durgin
Assistant Health Editor
Ava Durgin is the Assistant Health Editor at mindbodygreen. She is a recent graduate from Duke University where she received a B.A. in Global Health and Psychology. In her previous work, Ava served as the Patient Education Lead for Duke Hospital affiliated programs, focusing on combating food insecurity and childhood obesity.
Woman holding heavy weights
Image by Drazen Zigic / istock
July 18, 2025

If you’ve ever skipped a workout because “there’s not enough time,” this one’s for you. A new study shows that just 30 minutes of strength training twice a week, with just one set per exercise, can still lead to meaningful gains in strength, muscle, and endurance.

Even better? You don’t have to push to your absolute limit to see benefits.

The power of less-is-more workouts

In this 8-week study, researchers looked at 42 resistance-trained men and women. They were split into two groups:

  • One trained to muscle failure (going all-out until you physically can’t do another rep).
  • The other stopped just shy of failure, leaving about 2 reps in the tank (a method called “reps in reserve” or RIR).

Both groups performed just one set of nine exercises (covering all major muscle groups) twice a week, for around 30 minutes per session.

Here’s what happened:

  • Both groups saw significant improvements in muscle size, strength, and endurance.
  • Training to failure showed slightly more muscle growth, but the difference was modest.
  • Participants got better at estimating how close they were to failure, especially in upper-body exercises.

Why this matters

Many people believe you need to spend hours at the gym or push to extreme fatigue to see results. This study proves that consistent, lower-effort workouts can still deliver real progress, especially if you're tight on time or newer to lifting.

The takeaway

You don’t have to go all-out, every time, to make strength gains. Doing just one solid set of full-body moves twice a week, stopping just short of failure, can be enough to build strength, increase muscle, and keep your fitness goals moving forward.

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