This 50-Year-Old Trainer’s Muscle-Building Secrets Will Blow Your Mind—And Defy Everything You Thought About Aging!

This 50-Year-Old Trainer’s Muscle-Building Secrets Will Blow Your Mind—And Defy Everything You Thought About Aging!

Think getting jacked and building muscle after 50 is a wild fantasy only reserved for younger gym rats? Well, hold onto your dumbbells, because that old myth is getting a serious makeover. For ages, the stereotype’s been that guys past half a century should stick to light jogs or leisurely golf rounds — ambitious feats like pumping iron and sculpting serious strength? Nah, that’s a young man’s game… right? Actually, nothing could be farther from the truth. In fact, more and more men are smashing those preconceptions, hitting the weights hard, and rewriting the rules about aging and fitness. After three decades of lifting myself and coaching plenty of men over 50, I’m here to tell you building muscle isn’t just doable — it’s downright liberating when done the right way. So, are you ready to shake off those tired age excuses, manage your expectations smartly, and dive into a workout blueprint tailored perfectly for your forties, fifties, and beyond? Let’s bust some myths, keep your joints happy, and keep that consistency streak alive — because the best shape of your life might just be waiting around the corner.
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Estimated read time5 min read

This story is part of This Is 50+—an in-depth look at guys who are thriving later in life, with tips and tricks on how all of us can future-proof our bodies.


FOR FAR TOO long, lots of guys over 50 were likely to think the only fitness activities they could handle would be a light jog or a round of golf. If they were really ambitious, maybe a racquet sport like pickleball, or long walks around the neighborhood or out in nature. But pumping iron? Making muscle and strength gains long after half a century? Not feasible. That’s a young man’s game.

Nothing could be further from the truth. There are countless examples of men in their 50s—and even older!—smashing stereotypes about aging in fields like fitness training and powerlifting, proving that numbers only matter as much as you let them. Thankfully, more people are coming to see the light. Many of my clients are over 50, hitting the weights hard and building serious muscle. Some are even getting downright jacked and in the best shape of their lives.

I’m a prime example of the strength that can be built over time. I, too, am enjoying some of the best workouts of my life over 50. And after three decades of lifting weights, I’m still making slow but steady improvements—especially when I work with the realities of being over 50, rather than try to ignore them. I use these guidelines in my Max Muscle at 50 workout program, for MH MVP Premium members, which is designed specifically to provide the blueprint for older guys to get into the best shape of their lives.

But there are more general rules to follow, too. Here’s how you can make sure you’re setting yourself up for success in the gym, post-50:

Manage Expectations

IT’S MUCH HARDER to build new muscle tissue than it is to maintain what you’ve already built, especially as you get older. If you see a muscular over-50-year-old at the gym, it’s a safe bet he or she built the lion’s share of their size before they turned 40. That’s just an aspect of aging we won’t be able to ignore.

But while you won’t be adding pounds and pounds of new muscle every month after 50, it’s still possible to make incremental gains in strength and eventually muscle size, especially if you treat nutrition and recovery as seriously as training. Even a modest amount of muscle gain combined with low body fat levels makes a huge visual impact.

Make Your #1 Workout Goal Healthy Movement

AFTER AGE 50, avoiding injury replaces progression as your number-one priority. First, that means never working through pain. If something hurts, stop immediately and try a different exercise for the same muscle group, or move onto something else. The days of pushing through and no-pain, no gain are behind you if you actually want to make gains.

It also means moving away from “riskier” exercises towards those with a better safety profile. For example, a barbell shoulder press is a great exercise, but the dumbbell variation with a neutral grip (palms facing) is a lot safer for long-term shoulder health. Just take a page from muscle icon Arnold Schwarzenegger, who shifted almost all of his training to joint-friendly machines as he’s aged.

Lastly, lighten up the loads. While heavy weights are still the best for strength, studies show that lighter loads in the 6- to 30-rep range will all build muscle equally well, as long as you are working hard during those sets. And lighter weights are easier to handle and pose less risk of injury.

In my training, I always loved doing sets of incline barbell presses for 4 to 6 reps but the wear and tear on my shoulders became too much to endure. After switching to incline dumbbell presses for sets of 12 to 15 reps, my shoulder pain improved almost immediately, replaced by more “good soreness” where I really wanted it: in the pecs.

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bryan krahn

Ruben Chamorro

To keep his shoulders happy, Krahn changed from heavy incline barbell presses to higher-rep incline dumbbell presses with lighter loads.

Keep Up the Consistency

THE IDEA THAT older lifters need to work out less is a myth. It’s true that after 50, “use it or lose it” becomes reality, so try to do something every day. That doesn’t mean daily, crushing, weight training workouts, but rather a mix of activities that also makes recovery a high priority. Even while you’re shifting around to more joint-friendly exercises, you’re not cutting out sessions or skipping leg day entirely.

So while a 25-year-old guy looking to pack on muscle might weight train hard for five days a week, someone over 50 might lift weights three days a week, do a Peloton class on two other days, and maybe swim or play a round of golf or walk on the remaining days. The idea is healthy, consistent movement.

Put Flexibility First

max muscle at 50

RIGID TRAINING SPLITS, must-do exercises, and a “go heavy or go home” mindset are all best left to younger lifters. “Keep the consistency streak alive” is the over-50 mantra, and requires a flexible approach to exercise.

In practice, that means having alternative exercises at the ready if what you had planned feels off, or having scaled-back workouts in your back pocket for when you’re forced to use a small hotel gym or even your own body weight.

Flexibility also gives you the freedom to push a weight training workout to tomorrow and go for a brisk walk instead on days you feel like you just don’t physically or mentally have it.

Start Earlier Than You Think

OVER-50 TRAINING REALLY begins when you turn 40. Or at least it should. Many lifters approach their 40s with a big chip on their shoulder, attacking the weights harder than even their 20-something counterparts as a way of proving that “age is just a number.” This rarely ends well, and usually leads to entering your 50s injured, frustrated, and humbled.

A much smarter approach is to use your 40s as a transition decade, where you start playing a longer, safer game. That means never working through pain, avoiding or at least limiting high-risk lifts (even if they still feel good today), working harder on mobility, and optimizing lifestyle, recovery, and stress management.

If you don’t get this message until you’re 50, there’s still time to be smart. Just follow the strategies above and you’ll get back on the winning track.


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