If you scroll through Instagram or TikTok, it almost feels absurdly normal:


20–25 sets of chest.
30 sets of back.
“One more burnout set to finish.”

 

And if you do less, the question immediately arises:
👉 “Am I even training hard enough?”

 

The truth is uncomfortable – but liberating:


A large portion of these sets is pure garbage.
They're known as junk sets.

 

fitness

 

What are junk sets anyway?

 

 

A junk set is a training set that:

 

  • no longer stimulates any relevant muscle growth

 

  • doesn't provide any additional strength gain

 

  • but increases fatigue, stress, and recovery problems

 

In short:


👉 Effort without return

 

These sets may feel "hard", they look brutal on camera –
but your body just reacts with: "Thanks, but unnecessary."

 

fitness

 

The biggest misconception: More volume = more muscles

 

 

Many believe:

 

“If 10 sets are good, then 20 sets are twice as good.”

 

Unfortunately, the human body does not function linearly.

 

Muscle building follows the principle of diminishing returns:

 

  • The first sets → very effective

 

  • Additional sets → diminished benefit

 

  • Too many sets → no benefit + harm

 

Beyond a certain point, you're no longer training muscles,
but merely your fatigue.

 

fitness

 

When does a set become a junk set?

 

 

A set very likely becomes a junk set if:

 

  • your performance drops significantly

 

  • you reduce weights just to "rack up sets"

 

  • your RIR is consistently over 4–5

 

  • you're just pumping without generating tension

 

  • your focus is gone and technique deteriorates

 

The muscle then gets no meaningful stimulus
but the nervous system and recovery continue to suffer.

 

fitness

 

Social media has a junk set problem

 

 

Influencers often show:

 

  • extreme volume plans

 

  • endless drop, burnout, and rest-pause sets

 

  • training daily to absolute failure

 

Why?

 

  • It looks intense

 

  • It sells programs

 

  • It drives clicks

 

What you don't see:

 

  • many are not natural

 

  • they often have 10–15 years of training experience

 

  • sleep, nutrition, and recovery are optimized

 

  • or they are constantly overloaded, they just don't say it

 

👉 What works on social media doesn’t necessarily work for your body.

 

food

 

Scientifically speaking: How many sets make sense?

 

 

Studies show quite clearly:

 

  • Muscle growth predominantly occurs within the first 5–10 hard sets per muscle/week

 

  • beyond that, the effect decreases sharply

 

very high volumes increase:

 

Cortisol, injury risk, overtraining, and performance plateaus.

 

More volume is no substitute for quality.

 

fitness

 

Quality always beats quantity

 

 

An effective set is:

 

  • near muscle failure (RIR 0–2)

 

  • technically clean

 

  • with full concentration

 

  • with progressive overload

 

5 such sets beat 15 half-hearted ones.

 

If after 12 sets, you think:

 

“I’ll do 5 more because it’s in the plan”

 

… then you’re not training for muscles,
but for your ego.

 

fitness

 

Junk sets hinder progress – not the opposite

 

 

Many wonder:

 

  • no strength increase

 

  • poor pump

 

  • constant fatigue

 

  • joint problems

 

  • decreased motivation

 

And the reaction?


👉 Even more sets.

 

Often, the opposite is needed:

 

  • reduce volume

 

  • increase intensity

 

  • focus on progression

 

Fewer sets – better results.

 

fitness

 

How do you know if you're doing too many sets?

 

 

Ask yourself these questions honestly:

 

  • Am I increasing my weights or repetitions?

 

  • Do I feel powerful in training?

 

  • Am I fully recovering by the next session?

 

  • Or am I constantly training "empty"?

 

If progress is lacking, it’s almost never due to too few sets.

 

fitness

 

Conclusion: Junk sets are the silent muscle killer

 

 

More training is not automatically better.
Better training is better.

 

Junk sets:

 

  • look hard

 

  • feel industrious

 

  • but bring little progress

 

If you want to build muscle, train:

 

  • targeted

 

  • intensively

 

  • controlled

 

  • with meaningful volume

 

Your body doesn’t need a training marathon.
It needs clear, strong stimuli – and then recovery.