1 Year Plan

The 1-year plan for 100 pushups and beyond

A full year lets you build comprehensive upper body strength, not just pushup endurance. You'll finish with 100 pushups and a stronger, more capable body overall.

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Your Plan

Timeline
Build VolumeBuild DensityConsolidateDone
1

Build Volume

Weeks 1–4

Test your max — establish baseline
Train 4x/week with total volume focus
Hit 50 total reps per session across multiple sets
2

Build Density

Weeks 5–8

Reduce sets while increasing reps per set
Add pushup variations for strength
Target 3 sets of 25+ reps
3

Consolidate

Weeks 9–12

Focus on max single-set attempts weekly
Perfect form under fatigue
Hit 100 consecutive pushups

The Plan

1 Year plan

18 tasks across 4 milestones — 2–4/week

1

Q1: Build Basic Strength

Months 1–3
  • Start with whatever pushup variation you can do — even wall pushups
  • Progress through incline → knee → full pushups over 12 weeks
  • Build to 20+ consecutive full pushups by end of Q1
  • Add strength training for chest, shoulders, and triceps 2x/week
  • Develop a consistent 4x/week training schedule
2

Q2: Volume Building

Months 4–6
  • Build total session volume to 150+ reps
  • Achieve 40+ consecutive pushups
  • Master 5 pushup variations for well-rounded development
  • Add a structured upper body strength program alongside pushup training
3

Q3: Endurance Specialization

Months 7–9
  • Shift to high-rep sets — work toward 3 sets of 40+
  • Achieve 60+ consecutive pushups
  • Add breathing and pacing practice for long sets
  • Incorporate deload weeks every 4th week for recovery
  • Take progress video and compare form to month 1
4

Q4: Peak and Achieve

Months 10–12
  • Consolidate training into 1–2 max-effort sets per session
  • Achieve 80+ consecutive pushups by month 11
  • Final peak: 100 consecutive pushups with verified perfect form
  • Set your next fitness challenge — weighted pushups, muscle-ups, or handstands

Obstacles

What gets in the way

Common challenges and how to overcome them

Challenge

Hitting a plateau around 40–60 reps

Solution

The mid-range plateau is the most common. Break through it by adding variation — incline pushups for volume, decline pushups for intensity, and tempo pushups (3 seconds down, 1 second up) for endurance. Also try grease-the-groove training: multiple small sets throughout the day.

Challenge

Wrist or shoulder pain from high volume

Solution

Use pushup handles or fists to keep wrists neutral. Warm up thoroughly before every session. Strengthen your rotator cuff with band pull-aparts and external rotations. If pain persists, take 3–5 days off and reassess your form — flared elbows are the most common culprit.

Challenge

Form breaks down as reps increase

Solution

A pushup with bad form doesn't count. Film yourself regularly. Common form breakdowns: sagging hips, flared elbows past 45 degrees, incomplete range of motion, and head dropping forward. Practice stopping your set when form deteriorates rather than grinding out ugly reps.

Challenge

Boredom from doing the same exercise every day

Solution

Vary your pushup training with different grips (wide, narrow, diamond), tempos, and formats (pyramids, ladders, EMOM). Add complementary exercises — dips, pike pushups, and rows — to build supporting muscle groups and keep training interesting.

Challenge

Overtraining from doing pushups every single day

Solution

Muscles grow during recovery, not during training. Take at least 2 rest days per week. Alternate between high-volume days and lower-volume technique days. If your rep count is going down instead of up, you need more rest, not more pushups.

100 reps

Target in a single set

8–16 wk

Typical training timeline

4–5x/wk

Recommended training frequency

~200 cal

Burned during 100 pushups

FAQ

Common questions

If you can currently do 20–30 pushups, expect 8–12 weeks of consistent training. Starting from fewer than 10, plan for 12–16 weeks. Starting from zero, give yourself 16–24 weeks. The timeline depends on your starting fitness, consistency, and recovery quality.

Not every day at full intensity. Train pushups 4–5 days per week with 2–3 rest or light days. Grease-the-groove training (small sets throughout the day at 50% of your max) can be done daily, but dedicated hard sessions need recovery time.

Start with incline pushups (hands on a counter, table, or bench). Gradually lower the incline over weeks until you can do floor pushups. Wall pushups → counter pushups → bench pushups → knee pushups → full pushups. Each transition takes 1–2 weeks.

Yes, especially for beginners and intermediates. Pushups effectively build the chest, front delts, and triceps. Once you can do 30+ reps easily, you're training endurance more than hypertrophy. To keep building muscle, add weighted pushups or transition to bench press.

Hands slightly wider than shoulder-width, fingers pointing forward. Body in a straight line from head to heels. Lower until chest nearly touches the floor. Elbows at 30–45 degrees (not flared at 90). Full lockout at the top. Core tight throughout — no sagging or piking hips.

Both. In the early weeks, focus on total volume across many sets (e.g., 10 sets of 10). As you progress, shift toward fewer sets of higher reps (e.g., 4 sets of 25). The final phase is consolidating all reps into one max set. This periodization is what gets you to 100.

Yes. Rows and pull-ups strengthen the opposing muscle groups (back and biceps), preventing imbalances and reducing injury risk. Planks and hollow holds build the core stability needed for high-rep pushups. Dips strengthen the same muscles from a different angle.

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