If you've never strength trained before, the gym can feel intimidating. Which exercises? How heavy? How many sets? I'm Adam, an ISSA-certified personal trainer in Moncton, and in this article I'll walk you through an honest, no-nonsense 4-week beginner strength plan — the same framework I use with brand-new clients at Atom Fitness.
Before You Start: The Foundation
Beginners make the fastest strength gains of any training stage — this is called "newbie gains" and it's a real neurological phenomenon. Your job in the first 4 weeks isn't to destroy yourself; it's to learn the movements and build the habit.
Two or three sessions per week is ideal for beginners. Full-body workouts beat body-part splits for beginners because you practice each movement more frequently, which accelerates skill acquisition.
The Big 5 Movements
Every session will rotate through these five foundational movement patterns:
- Squat — goblet squat, box squat, or barbell back squat depending on comfort
- Hip Hinge — Romanian deadlift (RDL) or trap bar deadlift
- Horizontal Push — dumbbell bench press or push-up
- Horizontal Pull — dumbbell row or seated cable row
- Core Bracing — dead bug, bird dog, or plank
These movements cover every major muscle group and build the base for everything else — HIIT, sports, military fitness, whatever your end goal is.
Week-by-Week Plan
Weeks 1–2: Learn the Movements
Focus: form, not weight. Use light loads you can control perfectly.
- 3 days per week (e.g. Mon / Wed / Fri)
- 3 sets × 10–12 reps per exercise
- Rest: 60–90 seconds between sets
- Session duration: 45–60 minutes
- Goblet Squat — 3 × 12
- Romanian Deadlift — 3 × 12
- Dumbbell Bench Press — 3 × 12
- Seated Cable Row — 3 × 12
- Dead Bug — 3 × 8 per side
Weeks 3–4: Add Progressive Overload
Once your form is solid, start adding weight each session (even 2.5–5 lbs counts). This is progressive overload — the engine behind all strength gains.
- 3 sets × 8–10 reps (slightly heavier than weeks 1–2)
- Add a second exercise variant per session (e.g. Bulgarian split squat alongside goblet squat)
- Optional: add 10–15 min of low-intensity cardio at the end
What to Expect After 4 Weeks
In 4 weeks you won't look dramatically different in the mirror. But you'll:
- Move significantly better and with more confidence
- Be noticeably stronger (you'll be lifting meaningfully more weight than week 1)
- Have built the habit of training — the most important result of all
- Understand how to train without guessing
Why You Should Train With a Coach
A 4-week plan written for the internet can't account for your specific movement patterns, injury history, or how your body responds. I've seen people get injured doing exercises that are perfectly safe — because no one corrected their form in week 1.
At Atom Fitness in Moncton, your first session is free. I'll run you through a proper assessment, teach you the foundational movements correctly, and build a program that fits your body and your schedule. That's worth more than any generic internet plan.