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8.1 Muscular Strength vs Muscular Endurance

A man doing chin-ups (muscular strength) versus a woman running (physical endurance).
Muscular strength versus muscular endurance. Photo (left) by Ketut Subiyanto, Pexels License, Photo (right) by RUN 4 FFWPU, Pexels License, Colour modified.

Whether associated with upper or lower body exercise, the concept of physical fitness is typically composed of the following five key elements (Healthline, 2022, para 3):

  1. Body Composition
  2. Cardiorespiratory Endurance
  3. Flexibility
  4. Muscular Strength
  5. Muscular Endurance
 

Comparing Muscular Strength and Endurance

When specifically examining upper body exercises, most of the benefits to one’s overall physical fitness are produced by improvements to both muscular strength and muscular endurance. While these two elements are quite similar and are often used synonymously, there are differences in how we can prioritize each of them through training.

Item Muscular Strength Muscular Endurance
Definition (LifeFitness, 2024, para 3 & 4) The ability to produce maximal force for short periods of time The ability to produce lesser amounts of force for extended periods of
Weight/Resistance (Schoenfeld et al, 2021) 80 to 100% 1RM <60% 1RM
Repetitions (Schoenfeld et al, 2021) 1 to 5 15+
Muscle Fibres (Golden, 2025) Large recruitment of fast-twitch (Type II) muscle fibres Large recruitment of slow-twitch (Type I) muscle fibres
Energy Systems (Golden, 2025) Primarily anaerobic Increasingly aerobic as repetitions increase
Physiological Adaptations (Schoenfeld et al, 2021) Training-related increases in neuromuscular efficiency (how well the nervous system recruits and contracts muscle fibres) and coordination contribute to increases in muscular strength Training-related increases in metabolic activity (how efficiently oxygen can be delivered and used to create usable muscular energy) contribute to increases in muscular endurance

This table does not include weight/resistance from 60 to 80% 1RM or repetitions between 6 and 14. Although both muscular strength and endurance can be improved using weights and repetitions that fall within these ranges, most repetition continuums define these ranges as prioritizing muscular hypertrophy (i.e., muscle growth). It is, however, important to note that although they provide approximate guidelines, repetition continuums may oversimplify the relationship between muscular strength, endurance, and hypertrophy. Each of these factors can be improved across a range of resistance and repetition schemes and is highly dependent on overall training volume and effort (Schoenfeld et al, 2021).

This information highlights the importance of incorporating a variety of resistance and repetition schemes into a training regimen if one is trying to maximize the benefits to their overall physical fitness.

Fitness Fact

Icon of an athlete working with their personal trainer lifting weights.
“Personal trainer” by Undraw, Undraw License

Research by Helms et al (2018) and Krzysztofik et al. (2019) suggests that hypertrophy can occur (muscle can be built) with sets as high as 30+ repetitions as long as an individual is nearing muscular failure (the point at which another repetition is not possible) when completing their final repetitions of a given set. Nearing muscular failure is typically defined as having 1 to 4 repetitions in reserve, meaning an individual is 1 to 4 repetitions away from muscular failure.

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The Foundations of Human Movement and Physical Fitness Copyright © 2025 by A.J. Stephen; Sarah Fraser; and Connor Dalton is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.