🔍 Introduction
We’ve reached the final level of the Pyramid — and although it’s the least important in terms of direct impact, it’s also one of the most complex and misunderstood topics.
Many lifters become overly focused on details like tempo, ignoring the more important fundamentals — volume, intensity, and frequency — which often leads to stagnation.
Tempo refers to the speed at which you lift and lower a weight. Controlling it can help improve technique, increase muscular control, and reduce injury risk.
The concept became popular due to the idea that “time under tension” (TUT) was a critical variable for hypertrophy. However, evidence shows its importance is secondary, and in most cases, muscle growth depends more on volume, intensity, and total effort than on the exact tempo.
⚙️ Tempo Structure
Tempo is typically expressed using a four-number notation:
(E – P – C – P)
E (eccentric): the lowering phase of the movement, when the muscle lengthens.
P (bottom pause): time paused before beginning the upward phase.
C (concentric): the lifting phase, when the muscle shortens.
P (top pause): time paused at the end of the movement.
Example:
3–1–1–0 means lowering in 3 seconds, pausing 1 second at the bottom, lifting in 1 second, and not pausing at the top.
💪 Tempo and Strength
When the goal is maximum strength, tempo should not be controlled too strictly.
This is due to the load-velocity relationship: the heavier the weight, the slower it moves naturally.
That’s why the heaviest lifts (such as a 1RM attempt) are also the slowest.
In this context, the key is to lift as fast as possible, even if the movement appears slow.
✅ Recommendations for Strength:
Control the lowering phase (1–2 seconds) to maintain technique and stability.
Lift as fast as you can safely.
Don’t intentionally “slow down” the movement.
🧩 Tempo and Hypertrophy
In hypertrophy training, tempo can help improve control and increase the sensation of muscle engagement, but it does not replace real effort or effective load.
Time under tension can be useful if it enhances the mind–muscle connection or helps maintain constant tension through the range of motion, but beyond that, it doesn’t provide significant benefits over a natural, controlled tempo.
✅ Recommendations for Hypertrophy:
Eccentric phase: 2–3 seconds, controlled.
Pause: 0–1 second (depending on the exercise).
Concentric phase: 1–2 seconds, with maximum intent.
Don’t sacrifice load or range of motion just to “increase time under tension.”
🧠 Tempo and Technical Learning
Controlling tempo is particularly useful for beginners or during technical re-education.
A slower eccentric phase allows better coordination, helps identify errors, and reinforces proper posture.
It’s also useful in unilateral movements or when using free weights or suspension systems (like dumbbells or TRX), where control is essential for stability.
💬 Conclusion
Tempo doesn’t determine your results — but it can enhance them when applied with purpose. Its role is to keep you aware of your movement, reinforce technique and control — not to replace load or effort.
