After crushing a back day or pushing through an intense bicep workout, many lifters find themselves at a crossroads: “What should I train next?” The key to an effective training program isn’t just what you train, but how you recover and sequence your workouts for maximum gains and minimal risk of overtraining.
Understanding Muscle Recovery
Back and biceps are often trained together because they involve pulling movements. After this combo, both your lats and biceps need time to recover. Training another pulling-dominant workout the next day—like another back or bicep session—can lead to fatigue, poor performance, or even injury. Instead, shift your focus.
What to Workout After Back Day
If you just finished back day, your pulling muscles (lats, traps, rhomboids, rear delts, and biceps) are taxed. The ideal next step? Push-focused or lower body training.
Good workout options after back day:
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Chest and triceps: These muscles aren’t heavily involved during back training, so they’re fresh and ready.
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Legs: If your legs are recovered, lower body work is a safe bet.
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Core/abs: This can be a light active recovery day or a finisher.
Tip: Avoid shoulders the day after back if you did a lot of rowing or deadlifts that heavily recruited rear delts or traps.
What to Workout After Bicep Day
Biceps recover relatively quickly, but they assist in many compound upper body exercises. After isolating them, you can target muscle groups that don’t involve much elbow flexion.
Smart workout choices after bicep day:
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Legs: Zero bicep involvement, allowing full recovery.
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Chest and triceps: These push muscles don’t tax the biceps and allow continued upper body development.
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Shoulders: Specifically focus on lateral and anterior delts, which aren’t bicep-dependent.
Avoid: Pull-heavy compound movements like rows or pull-ups the day after biceps—your grip and arms may still be fatigued.
Personal Experience: Learning the Hard Way
Years ago, I made the mistake of scheduling heavy barbell rows the day after biceps. My form slipped halfway through the set because my arms weren’t ready to assist my back. That small error led to a minor strain that benched me for a week. Since then, I’ve built recovery-aware splits: after biceps, I hit legs or chest; after back, I’ll do push day or rest.
Sample Weekly Split (Push-Pull-Legs Inspired)
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Monday: Back + Biceps
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Tuesday: Chest + Triceps
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Wednesday: Legs
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Thursday: Shoulders + Abs
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Friday: Pull (Light Volume or Technique Focus)
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Saturday: Full Body or Active Recovery
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Sunday: Rest
Final Thoughts
What you train after back day or bicep day should always consider fatigue, movement patterns, and injury prevention. Rotating muscle groups strategically keeps your body fresh, promotes hypertrophy, and maintains long-term consistency.
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