What Are the Benefits of the 3-2-1 Method?
The most obvious appeal of the 3-2-1 method is that it gives your workout routine some structure. But the reason it's such an effective approach to exercise is due to the way it alternates between different types of workouts, says Brookelyn Suddell, fitness instructor and Crunch Fitness director of group fitness strategy and development.
"We have a natural tendency to duplicate workouts or favour certain exercises much more than others," Suddell explains. "That's why the 3-2-1 method is a great way to make sure you're evenly spreading out your training focus in a structured way."
Each one of these workout modalities comes with important benefits: Strength workouts build muscle mass, Pilates improves mind-muscle connection, core strength, and flexibility, and cardio or conditioning increases endurance and cardiovascular health. By regularly switching between these workout types, you essentially prevent your body from plateauing and ensure you're working on all those elements of fitness at once.
The 3-2-1 method also helps prevent overtraining by incorporating built-in recovery time, since the two Pilates days act as active rest days. That can speed up the recovery process, help you prevent injury, and allow you to keep reaping benefits from your workouts.
"Training before your body has recovered and rebuilt is like stretching an elastic band that has already been stretched," exercise physiologist Carmen Van Rensburg tells POPSUGAR. "Because it has not been allowed to recover to its original state, further stretching will break it. Altering between strength training and cardio allows some muscle groups to rest while others are worked out."
Not all fitness trends are beginner friendly, but the 3-2-1 method actually is, because while it does provide a guideline for working out, your individual routine can be tailored to your own abilities.
How to Try the 3-2-1 Method
For those wanting to get into the 3-2-1 method, Van Rensburg recommends starting simple, with a fixed set of exercises and reps that you find doable. Then, when you get the hang of switching between strength, Pilates, and conditioning, you can begin adding variety and upping the intensity. (For beginners, it may also be helpful to swap strength and Pilates, instead doing two days of strength and three days of Pilates each week.)
Suddell's advice, whether you're a beginner or a longtime gym goer, is to treat your weekly 3-2-1 like a meal plan, by writing out in your phone or a planner what you'll be doing on each of the days. "Your days should be different enough from each other and primarily stick within their categories," she notes. "That does not mean you can't include some cardio on strength days, but the primary focus, or the majority of the workout, should be clear."
Try planning your week so workouts of the same type don't stack up against one another. For example: strength, Pilates, strength, Pilates, strength, cardio, rest.
Strength Workouts
If you're doing three days of strength, Van Rensburg's suggestion is to divide it up into two days of upper-body workouts and one day of lower-body workouts. For the two days of upper body workouts, per her guidance, you'll want to dedicate the first day to push exercises and the second to pull exercises. "Examples include chest and triceps work (push exercises) on day one, back and biceps work (pull exercises) on day two, and legs work on day three," Van Rensburg says. TikTokers also recommend doing one day of upper-body work, one day of lower-body work, and one day of total-body strength work.
Pilates
The Pilates sessions can include reformer Pilates, mat Pilates, or — if you're just not a Pilates girlie — you can swap it for yoga, barre, or mobility workouts. You can attend an IRL class or cue up a Pilates workout from an app like Alo Moves or Obé Fitness, or stream one for free on YouTube Fitness.
Cardio and Conditioning
The American Heart Association does recommend at least two and a half hours of cardio a week, but neither Suddell nor Van Rensburg has qualms about reserving the cardio for your one conditioning day, even if your workout isn't a full two and a half hours long. Conditioning isn't just limited to cardio-style workouts either — it can be any high-intensity exercise that has minimal rest, such as HIIT or cycling. So if sprinting on a treadmill sounds boring to you, Suddell says you can switch it up by taking group classes or getting outdoors.
In terms of results, no matter what you choose to do on each day, as long as you stick to the 3-2-1 breakdown, you're bound to see and feel the changes in your strength, flexibility, and cardio fitness. At the very least, it could help you stick to working out and help you plan your workouts with a little less thought. It's always important to listen to your body, especially when starting a new workout routine, but ultimately it's safe to say this one is expert-approved.