Fitness & activity · 236

Weekly training load

What simple training load follows from duration and effort?

Your numbers

minutes
/10
sessions

Quick answer

What does the Weekly training load calculate?

What simple training load follows from duration and effort? This calculator uses average session duration, session effort from 1 to 10, and sessions per week to estimate simple session-rpe load immediately in your browser.

With the values currently entered, the result is 1,320weekly session-RPE load. It also shows per-session load, and training time.

How to use the Weekly training load

  1. Replace the example values with your own numbers.
  2. Review the result and supporting figures as they update automatically.
  3. Check the formula and assumptions before using the estimate for a decision.

Inputs used

  • Average session duration — entered in minutes
  • Session effort from 1 to 10 — entered in /10
  • Sessions per week — entered in sessions

Weekly training load formula

Session minutes × perceived effort × weekly sessions

Assumptions

  • Effort uses a consistent personal 1–10 scale.
  • This is a simple tracking score, not a clinical training prescription.

Practical guide

Weekly training load example and edge cases

What simple training load follows from duration and effort? Let's use a concrete example, then look at the assumptions that can move the answer.

Example: A practical weekly training load scenario

For this example, use average session duration of 55 minutes, session effort from 1 to 10 of 6 /10, and sessions per week of 4 sessions. These are starting values, so replace them with numbers that match your situation.

Average session duration
55 minutes
Session effort from 1 to 10
6 /10
Sessions per week
4 sessions

Calculated result1,320weekly session-RPE load

Start with weekly session-RPE load. Then check per-session load, and training time to understand what sits behind the main result.

Example results use the default display profile. The calculator above follows your selected country and units.

How to read the result

  • Read the main result first. The supporting figures for per-session load, and training time explain how the estimate is built.
  • The method is Session minutes × perceived effort × weekly sessions. Keep the units consistent and use values from the same time period.

Edge cases worth checking

When average session duration is unusual

Effort uses a consistent personal 1–10 scale. Double-check this input before relying on the result.

When sessions per week is uncertain

This is a simple tracking score, not a clinical training prescription. Run a lower and higher value to see a useful range.

What changes the result most

Average session duration

Keep average session duration on the same time basis as the other inputs. Monthly and annual values are easy to mix up.

Session effort from 1 to 10

Change session effort from 1 to 10 on its own first. This shows how strongly it affects the answer.

Sessions per week

Change sessions per week on its own first. This shows how strongly it affects the answer.

Try a different scenario

Small changes show whether the answer is stable or sensitive.

Average session duration: 10% lower

50 minutes

1,200weekly session-RPE load

Average session duration: 10% higher

61 minutes

1,464weekly session-RPE load

Session effort from 1 to 10: 10% higher

7 /10

1,540weekly session-RPE load

Common mistakes

Check average session duration

Effort uses a consistent personal 1–10 scale. Make sure this matches the number you enter.

Keep sessions per week consistent

This is a simple tracking score, not a clinical training prescription. Use the same units and time period throughout the calculation.

Do not rely on one weekly training load scenario

Run a cautious case and an optimistic case. The range is often more useful than one exact-looking number.

Use this result well

Use it for

What simple training load follows from duration and effort?

Do not use it as

Use it for activity planning, not medical diagnosis or individualized health advice.