Калькулятор Набору М'язів – Максимальний Потенціал Зростання М'язів
How much muscle can you realistically gain per month? Our muscle gain calculator uses evidence-based models (Martin Berkhan, Eric Helms, Lyle McDonald) to estimate your natural muscle building potential based on training experience, body weight, and gender.
Як користуватися цим калькулятором
- Введіть Current Body Weight
- Введіть Unit
- Введіть Gender
- Введіть Training Experience
- Введіть Height (cm)
- Натисніть кнопку Розрахувати
- Прочитайте результат, відображений під калькулятором
How Much Muscle Can You Build Naturally?
Natural muscle gain is a slow, biologically limited process. Unlike fat loss (which can occur quickly), muscle protein synthesis is tightly regulated by hormones (testosterone, growth hormone, IGF-1), genetics, and training age.
Evidence-based estimates from research and respected practitioners:
| Training Level | Men (kg/month) | Women (kg/month) | Annual Potential |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beginner (0–1 yr) | 0.9–1.1 kg | 0.45–0.55 kg | 10–12 kg men / 5–6 kg women |
| Intermediate (1–3 yr) | 0.45–0.55 kg | 0.2–0.3 kg | 5–6 kg men / 2.5–3 kg women |
| Advanced (3–5 yr) | 0.2–0.25 kg | 0.1–0.15 kg | 2–3 kg men / 1–1.5 kg women |
| Elite (5+ yr) | 0.1–0.15 kg | 0.05–0.08 kg | <1.5 kg men / <0.8 kg women |
These figures represent optimal conditions: consistent progressive overload, sufficient protein (~1.8–2.2g/kg), caloric surplus (200–400 kcal above TDEE), adequate sleep, and low stress.
The Berkhan/Leangains Model
Martin Berkhan's model predicts maximum muscular potential at lean body fat (~5% for men, ~12% for women) based on height:
Men: Maximum lean body mass (kg) = Height (cm) − 100
Women: Maximum lean body mass (kg) = (Height (cm) − 100) × 0.6
Example: A 178cm man's maximum lean body mass = 178 − 100 = 78 kg. At 10% body fat, maximum body weight = 78 / 0.90 = 86.7 kg. This represents a lifetime ceiling — most people plateau well before reaching it.
A 165cm woman's maximum lean body mass = (165 − 100) × 0.6 = 39 kg. At 20% body fat, max weight = 39 / 0.80 = 48.75 kg.
The Caloric Surplus Required for Muscle Gain
Building muscle requires energy. The caloric cost of gaining 1 kg of lean muscle mass is approximately 2,500–3,500 calories above maintenance — but this assumes ideal conditions where most surplus goes to muscle, not fat.
Optimal surplus size by training level:
- Beginners: 200–500 kcal/day surplus (newbie gains allow relatively lean bulking)
- Intermediate: 150–300 kcal/day surplus (rate of muscle gain slows, smaller surplus prevents excessive fat gain)
- Advanced: 100–200 kcal/day surplus (very slow gains, minimize fat accumulation)
Larger surpluses don't build more muscle — they just add more fat. A dirty bulk (eating everything in sight) in an intermediate/advanced trainee mostly adds fat, not muscle.
Protein Requirements for Maximum Muscle Growth
Protein provides the amino acids needed for muscle protein synthesis. Research consistently shows that muscle protein synthesis is maximized at:
- Daily total: 1.6–2.2g per kg of body weight (higher end for cutting, lower end for bulking)
- Per meal dose: 0.4g/kg per meal, spread across 3–5 meals daily
- Post-workout: 20–40g complete protein within 1–2 hours of training
Protein quality matters: complete proteins (all essential amino acids) are superior. Best sources: eggs, chicken, beef, fish, dairy, and whey protein. Leucine content is particularly important as it triggers mTOR (muscle protein synthesis pathway).
Progressive Overload: The Key Driver of Muscle Growth
The single most important training principle for muscle gain is progressive overload — consistently increasing the stimulus over time. Without increasing load, reps, or training volume, muscles have no reason to grow.
Methods of progressive overload:
- Increasing weight: Add 2.5–5 lbs when you can complete the top of your rep range
- Increasing reps: Add 1–2 reps per set while maintaining form
- Increasing sets: Add a working set per week
- Reducing rest time: Same work in less time = increased density
- Improving technique: Better range of motion and muscle activation
Track your training in a log. Without measurement, you can't ensure you're progressing. Most people plateau because they stop progressively overloading, not because they've reached their genetic limit.
Sleep and Recovery: The Overlooked Muscle Builders
Muscle is built during recovery, not during training. Training is the stimulus; sleep and nutrition are when synthesis occurs. Key recovery factors:
- Sleep duration: 7–9 hours per night. Sleep deprivation reduces testosterone and growth hormone by 10–15%, directly impairing muscle gain. A single night of 5 hours sleep reduces anabolic hormone levels measurably.
- Training frequency: Each muscle group should be trained 2–3 times per week. Muscles are fully recovered and ready for the next stimulus in 48–72 hours for most people.
- Deload weeks: Every 4–8 weeks, reduce volume by 40–60% for one week to allow systemic recovery and prevent overtraining.
- Stress management: Cortisol (stress hormone) directly opposes muscle building. High-stress lifestyles require extra attention to sleep and recovery nutrition.
Body Recomposition: Building Muscle While Losing Fat
Simultaneously building muscle and losing fat — body recomposition — is possible but limited. It's most pronounced in beginners, people returning after a break, and those who are significantly overweight.
Conditions that favor recomposition:
- Training at maintenance calories (not a significant surplus or deficit)
- High protein intake (2.0–2.4g/kg)
- Consistent strength training with progressive overload
- Higher body fat percentage (more fat to fuel the process)
- Good sleep and recovery
The rate of recomposition is slower than either dedicated bulking or cutting — typically 0.5–1 kg of muscle gain per month for beginners at maintenance. Advanced trainees see minimal recomposition.
Останнє оновлення: March 2026
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does it take to build noticeable muscle?
Most beginners notice visible changes in 6–8 weeks with consistent training and nutrition. Significant body composition changes typically become apparent to others at 3–6 months. The first year of training produces the most dramatic results in a lifetime of lifting.
How many kg of muscle can I gain in a year?
Beginners: 8–12 kg in the first year (under optimal conditions). Intermediate: 3–5 kg/year. Advanced: 1–2 kg/year. Women gain roughly half these amounts due to lower testosterone levels.
Can you gain muscle without weights?
Yes. Bodyweight training (push-ups, pull-ups, squats, dips) can build significant muscle, especially for beginners. The principle of progressive overload still applies — progress to harder variations, add reps, or add weight (vest, backpack).
Is cardio bad for muscle gain?
Moderate cardio (2–3 sessions/week) doesn't significantly impair muscle gain and improves cardiovascular health. Excessive cardio (daily high-intensity) can impair recovery and reduce muscle gain. Running and strength training are compatible with proper nutrition and programming.
How much protein do I need to build muscle?
1.6–2.2g per kg of body weight daily. For a 75kg person: 120–165g protein/day. Prioritize complete protein sources (meat, fish, eggs, dairy, whey) and spread across 3–5 meals for optimal muscle protein synthesis.
What is the best rep range for muscle growth?
Research shows muscle can grow across a wide rep range (5–30 reps) when trained close to failure. The "hypertrophy range" of 6–12 reps remains most efficient. Include both heavier compound work (3–6 reps) and higher-rep isolation work (12–20 reps).
At what age do you stop building muscle?
You can build muscle at any age. Testosterone and growth hormone decline after 30, but muscle protein synthesis response to training remains significant well into the 70s. Older adults may need slightly more protein (2.0–2.4g/kg) and training volume for equivalent gains.
Does creatine help build muscle faster?
Creatine enables higher training volumes (more reps per set), which drives greater training stimulus for muscle growth. Studies consistently show creatine users gain 2–4 lbs more lean mass over 8–12 weeks compared to placebo when training similarly.
How much weight should I gain per week during a bulk?
Beginners: 0.25–0.5 kg/week. Intermediate: 0.1–0.25 kg/week. Advanced: 0.05–0.1 kg/week. Faster gains mean more fat accumulation. Monitor body composition, not just weight — if fat is accumulating excessively, reduce surplus.
Can women get too bulky from weight training?
No. Women have 15–20x less testosterone than men, making it very difficult to build large amounts of muscle. The "toned" look women often desire IS muscle — you need resistance training to achieve it. Building the amount of muscle required to look "too bulky" takes years of dedicated effort in men, let alone women.