The 40+ Starting Programme
Eight weeks. Two fully structured tracks — gym and outdoor, both equally detailed. Three days a week. Full body, progressive, honest. Built from three decades of working with real people who started later than they planned.
Who This Programme Is For
Adults over 40 are not a single category. Two people the same age can have profoundly different starting points. Read both descriptions below and be honest about which one fits you. Starting at the right level is not a weakness — it is the difference between a programme that works and one that does not.
The True Beginner
You have not trained regularly before, or not for many years. Walking is your current limit. You may be carrying more weight than you would like. You may have been told by a doctor, a partner, or your own body that it is time to do something.
→ Start with Phase 1 exactly as written. Do not skip ahead. Do not add extra sessions. Eight weeks done properly will change your body and your mindset. That is not a promise — it is what happens when you follow a structured programme with consistency.
The Returning Exerciser
You have trained before and know your way around a gym or a park. Life got in the way — work, injury, family — and it has been six months to a few years since you trained consistently. You are fitter than a true beginner but not where you were.
→ Start with Phase 1 but you may progress through it more quickly. Pay attention to how your body responds in the first two weeks before increasing load. The temptation to jump straight to Phase 2 is understandable. Resist it for at least two weeks.
The Real Story Behind This Programme
In the early 2000s I was working as a personal trainer in Chelsea. A client in her forties came to me with a simple brief: she wanted to train properly, get fit and look the way she felt she should look. She had never trained with a qualified trainer before and her form on free weights was, at the start, unreliable.
The programme we built together was not complicated. Thirty minutes of cardiovascular work on two or three machines, followed by a full body resistance session using dumbbells and machines. Three days a week. Progressive resistance throughout. We trained in the gym, in the park and on stairs — running a flight of steps, then bodyweight squats and sit-ups to failure before the next run. She hated the stairs. She kept coming back.
The biggest challenge was not fitness. It was managing her enthusiasm. She wanted to increase intensity before her body was ready. It took several conversations to slow her down and convince her that the results would come faster if she let the process work at its own pace. She eventually listened. Within six weeks she was visibly stronger. Within twelve weeks she was noticeably leaner. She trained with me for almost two years.
This programme is built on that experience — and on thirty years of working with people who started later than they planned and achieved more than they expected.
Why This Programme Is Not Behind the Times
The fundamentals of exercise physiology have not changed because human biology has not changed. A muscle still grows through progressive overload. The cardiovascular system still improves through sustained aerobic work. Recovery still requires rest and adequate protein. Every programme that has produced results — from the 1970s to today — has done so through these three mechanisms. The packaging changes with every fitness trend. The mechanism does not.
This programme is built on compound movements, progressive loading and cardiovascular work. That is precisely what the NHS guidelines, the ACSM recommendations and thirty years of coaching experience all point toward for someone starting at 40 or 50. It does not have a trend behind it. It has evidence. When the fitness industry produces a genuinely new mechanism that achieves results differently, it will earn its place on this site. Until then, this is the programme — because it works, and it has always worked, for exactly the reason stated above.
For the full argument, read the article: Every New Programme Is the Same Programme →
How to Use This Programme
Choose one track and follow it for all eight weeks. Do not mix and match sessions from both tracks within the same week — the progression is designed to work within each track. If you are a gym member, use the Gym Track. If you prefer outdoor training or do not have gym access, use the Outdoor Track. Both deliver the same result over eight weeks.
Three days per week, with at least one rest day between sessions. Monday, Wednesday and Friday works well. So does Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. The specific days matter less than the gap between them. Rest days are not wasted days — they are when the adaptation happens.
Choosing Your Starting Weight
The weights listed in the Gym Track are starting points based on experience working with beginners and returning exercisers in their forties. Your starting weight may be different and that is entirely correct — bodies differ and the numbers on the exercises are guides, not rules. The test is simple: you should be able to complete every rep of every set with good form, feel the effort in the final two or three reps, and not feel as though the weight is managing you rather than the other way around.
If in doubt, go lighter. You can always add weight. You cannot undo a form breakdown or a pulled muscle.
Phase 1 — CV Section (Both Tracks, 20 Minutes)
Phase 1 — Resistance Section (Both Tracks)
Phase 1 — Finish (Both Tracks)
Phase 2 — CV Section (25 Minutes)
Phase 2 — Resistance Section
Phase 3 — CV Section (30 Minutes)
Phase 3 — Resistance Section
What to Expect
Week one will feel hard. Your body is being asked to do things it has not done for some time. Soreness after the first session is normal and is explained on the DOMS page. Do not use it as a reason to miss session two. The second session is always easier than the first, and the third easier than the second.
Weeks three and four are where most people hit the first genuine progress. Weights that felt heavy in week one feel manageable. Movements that felt awkward begin to feel natural. The CV work that left you breathless in week one begins to feel like something you can sustain. This is adaptation. It is working.
The biggest mistake made at this point — and it is almost universal — is doing too much. The programme is working and you feel good, so you add a fourth session, increase the weight by too much, or push the CV harder than the prescription. Resist it. The plan is progressive for a reason. What you are building is a sustainable habit and a properly conditioned body, not a quick result that disappears when the enthusiasm does.
By week eight you will be stronger than you were in week one. Measurably, visibly stronger. That is the point of the programme. Then you move to the next one.
Test your press-up maximum, your plank hold and your 1km walk or jog time at the start of week one and again at the end of week eight. The numbers will tell you what eight weeks of consistent, progressive work produces on a real body.
The next step is the Bodyweight Foundation programme or Beginner Resistance Training — depending on whether you want to continue without a gym or progress to barbell compound movements.