5 Day High-Intensity Functional Bodybuilding Workout

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Looking to switch up your training routine? Maximize performance, strength, and body composition with this 6-week high-intensity functional bodybuilding program.

WORKOUT SUMMARY​

Workout Description​

High-intensity functional bodybuilding (HIFB) is a hybrid training protocol, which combines traditional bodybuilding, high-intensity functional movements, and interval training to optimize body composition and maximize performance. Personally, conventional bodybuilding splits and steady-state cardio can become monotonous and boring. Although splits are extremely effective in building more muscle and strength, they’re not always the most sustainable and challenging training protocols.
Training with intent is crucial if you want to maximize your athleticism, body composition, and training performance. Burning body fat while building more muscle mass aka “clean bulking” is one of the most sought after, yet difficult body aesthetics to achieve. If total body recomposition is your goal, HIFB will turn up the intensity and increase the workout volume to get you shredded in no time.
Recommended: Need help building muscle? Take our Free Muscle Building Course

What is High-Intensity Functional Bodybuilding?​

The main word in functional training is function. Function means purpose, therefore, functional training is training for a specific purpose. That purpose being to build more strength, balance, and stability recruited to perform common movement patterns while performing everyday activities. Now, combine function with bodybuilding. Bodybuilding is linear and primarily focused on body aesthetics by maximizing hypertrophy. The purpose is focused on strength and definition, by optimizing body composition. In other words, your intent is to look good.
High intensity functional bodybuilding combines three different training modalities: traditional bodybuilding, interval training, and functional fitness into one hybrid training protocol. This is created to maximize performance, functional movement, mobility, strength, and optimize composition.
HIFB is programmed to enhance all aspects of human performance, focused on strength, mobility, and aesthetics, through higher volume isolated, compound, and constantly varied movements, without the traditional Olympic lifts, found in similar training modalities such as high-intensity functional training, aka CrossFit.
HIFB training incorporates compound movements; multi-jointed movements, which require more than one muscle group to be used throughout an exercise. Compound movements such as squats, deadlifts, and push press can improve mobility, strength, and functionality. These types of exercises, mimic specific movement patterns used for everyday activities such as hip rotation, muscle stabilizers, flexor muscles, and ensure your joints are moving through a full range of motion. How often do you pull down weight from above your head, behind your neck, similar to a military press? Probably never. How often do you lift something heavy off the floor? Most likely every day.
With high-intensity functional bodybuilding, you get the best of everything, and more bang for your buck, in one training protocol.
Related: 6 Week High-Intensity Functional Training Workout
Swolverine athlete doign barbell back squats

5 Day High-Intensity Functional Bodybuilding Workout​

Bodybuilding is conventionally performed utilizing an intensity between 50-70%, with 3-5 sets, of 6-12 reps, with 1–3-minute rest intervals. Bodybuilding is systematically designed to increase gains through periodization, ensuring progressive overload, performed with traditional split training isolating specific muscle groups, designated to certain days (i.e. back and biceps, chest and triceps, legs and shoulders). HIFB incorporates this same type of training split, but with higher volume, increased intensity, shorter rest intervals, and added supersets with accelerated functional movements.
Related: 7 Ways to Make Your Workouts More Challenging
HIFB is performed at 80-90% intensity, 3-5 sets, 10-16 reps with .30-1-minute rest intervals. Fundamentally bodybuilding and HIFB are very similar, the only difference is the training objective. Instead of just aesthetics, we’re adding an aspect of athleticism and performance.
This high-intensity functional bodybuilding program follows a standard split, 5 days per week, with two rest days, and is to be followed for 6 weeks. This program follows a linear progression, meaning as time goes on, you will need to increase the load in order to build more muscle and stack on gains. The load is not as important as hitting the prescribed rep volume – every rep counts. Despite the weight you choose, make sure you’re hitting the volume.

Workout Schedule​

  • Day 1 - Shoulders and Legs
  • Day 2 - Chest and Triceps
  • Day 3 - Back and Biceps
  • Day 4 - Shoulders and Legs
  • Day 5 - Back and Chest
  • Day 6 - Rest
  • Day 7 - Rest

Day 1 - Shoulders and Legs​

ExerciseSetsReps
1a. Kettlebell Z Press410 each side
1b. Burpee to Pull Up48
2a. Barbell Deadlift412
2b. Alternating Kettlebell Box Step Ups430
2c. Kettlebell Swings410
3a. Single Arm Overhead Kettlebell Walking Lunge412 each side
3b. Toes to Bar or Hanging Knee Raise410
3c. Ground to Overhead with Plate412
4a. Squats410
4b. Barbell Shoulder Press410
5a. Dumbbell Lateral Raise412 each side
5b. Band Pull Apart410
5c. Single Leg Split Squat410 each side

Day 2 - Chest and Triceps​

ExerciseSetsReps
1a. Tricep Rope Push Down416
1b. Burpee to Overhead Plate Raise410
2a. Tricep Bar Pushdown414
2b. Narrow Push Up415
2c. Air Squats420
3a. Cable Flys412
3b. Bench Step Ups420
3c. Single Arm Pull Down420 each side
4a. Incline Dumbbell Press410
4b. Bench V-Ups420
5a. Dumbbell Bench Press410
5b. Burpees410
5c. Bench Dips412

Day 3 - Back and Biceps​

ExerciseSetsReps
1a. Lat Pull Down414
1b. Dumbbell Curls410 each side
2a. Seated Row414
2b. Rope Curls414
3a. Rope Face Pulls412
3b. Narrow Push Up415
3c. Bent Over Dumbbell Curls410 each side
4a. Strict Pull Ups410
4b. Toes to Bar or Hanging Knee Raises410
5a. Bent Over Single Arm Kettlebell Row410 each side
5b. EZ Bar Bicep 21s421s
5c. V-Ups414

Day 4 - Shoulders and Legs​

ExerciseSetsReps
1a. Standing Kettlebell Press312
1b. Barbell Front Squat36 (heavy)
2a. Barbell Deadlifts36 (heavy)
2b. Burpees31 minute
3. Ball Slams1100 for time
4a. Front Rack Kettlebell Walking Lunge320
4b. Toes to Bar or Hanging Knee Raise38
4c. Dumbbell Lateral Raise to Front Raise312 each side
5. Wall Balls*425
6. Handstand Push Up Against Wall**410
Notes:

Day 5 - Back and Chest​

Swolverine athlete doing toes to bar.

Supplement Recommendations​

Nutrition and supplementation play fundamental roles in optimizing your body composition. Training and nutrition are two co-dependent variables, and if you’re missing one, then you’ll never reach your goals. A diet consisting of high-quality lean proteins, complex carbohydrates, and healthy fats, and the right supplements to optimize your training and fill the gaps, will help and build more muscle and optimize your performance.
Pre-Workout Meal
Pre-Workout
Intra-Workout
Post-Workout Meal
 
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