BackFebruary 26, 20267 min readtrainingrecoveryhrvstrengthCentury

Deload week: when to take one (using HRV, resting heart rate, and performance)

A deload is not weakness. It is how you keep making progress. Learn the clearest signs you need one, how to structure it, and how to use HRV and resting heart rate without overreacting.

Deload week: when to take one (using HRV, resting heart rate, and performance)

Deload week: when to take one (using HRV, resting heart rate, and performance)

Most people wait too long to deload.

They push through the warning signs, then they get forced into a deload by:

  • a tweak that will not go away
  • a cold that hangs around for 10 days
  • a week where every session feels harder than it should

A deload week is not a break from discipline.

It is a short, planned reduction in training stress so your body can absorb the work you already did.

This guide is the practical version: how to decide, what to change, and how to use HRV and resting heart rate as inputs, not dictators.

TL;DR

  • Deload when fatigue is rising faster than fitness.
  • Look for patterns, not single days: 7 to 14 day trend beats one scary HRV reading.
  • Strong signals you need a deload: performance drop, motivation drop, unusually sore, sleep gets worse, resting heart rate creeps up, and HRV stays suppressed.
  • A good deload reduces volume 30 to 50% and keeps some intensity, but fewer hard sets.
  • If you are sick, injured, or sleep deprived, do an easier recovery week instead of a "perfect" deload.

What is a deload week?

A deload week is a planned week where you intentionally reduce training stress.

That stress can come from:

  • volume (how much)
  • intensity (how hard)
  • density (how little rest)
  • novelty (new exercises, new terrain, new shoes)

Deloads work because training is a signal.

The adaptation often happens after the session, during recovery.

A deload creates space for that recovery while keeping your routine.

Deload vs rest week vs taper

These terms get mixed up.

  • Deload week: reduce stress so you can keep progressing.
  • Rest week: you are sick, injured, or life is chaos, so you reduce stress to heal.
  • Taper: reduce training to peak performance for an event (common in endurance).

If your goal is long term progress, a deload is a tool.

If your goal is survival, use a rest week.

The 6 most reliable signs you need a deload

You do not need all of these.

Two or three, sustained for more than a few days, is usually enough.

1) Performance drops at the same effort

Examples:

  • weights that felt smooth last week feel heavy
  • your usual easy pace is now "medium"
  • you cannot hit your normal rep targets

One bad session is noise.

A pattern is a signal.

2) Your motivation is gone

This is underrated.

If you normally want to train but suddenly feel dread, do not ignore it.

Motivation can fade for many reasons, but accumulated fatigue is a common one.

3) Your soreness sticks around longer than normal

A little soreness is fine.

The red flag is when:

  • soreness lasts 72 hours for simple sessions
  • you feel beaten up from workouts that should be easy
  • small aches start appearing

4) Your sleep gets worse

Fatigue is not just physical.

A stressed nervous system often shows up as:

  • waking up earlier than normal
  • restless sleep
  • trouble falling asleep even though you are tired

If sleep is falling apart, you will not recover well.

5) Resting heart rate creeps up

If your morning resting heart rate is consistently higher than your baseline, it often means:

  • you are carrying fatigue
  • you are getting sick
  • you are under-fueled or dehydrated

Do not react to one morning.

React to a trend.

6) HRV stays suppressed

HRV is useful because it is a proxy for stress and recovery.

But HRV is also noisy.

The best way to use it is:

  • compare to your baseline
  • look at a 7 day average
  • use it alongside how you feel and how you perform

If your HRV is consistently below baseline and training feels harder, a deload is often the correct move.

The decision framework (simple and boring)

Use this three step check.

Step 1: rule out obvious problems

Before you change your whole plan, check the basics:

  • did you sleep less than 7 hours several nights?
  • are you dehydrated?
  • are you eating less than usual?
  • are you dealing with unusual life stress?

If yes, fix the basics first.

Step 2: identify what is overloaded

Most people try to deload everything.

Better: deload what is actually overloaded.

Examples:

  • if your legs feel dead, keep upper body strength but reduce lower body volume
  • if running is beating you up, keep easy cycling or walking
  • if lifting is crushing you, keep easy Zone 2 and reduce hard sets

Step 3: pick a deload style

Pick the simplest option you will actually execute.

How to structure a deload week (templates)

These templates work for most people.

Template A: reduce volume (most common)

  • reduce total sets, reps, or minutes by 30 to 50%
  • keep technique and movement quality high
  • keep intensity moderate so the sessions still feel like training

For strength training, that might look like:

  • 2 to 3 sessions
  • same exercises
  • same weight or slightly lighter
  • half the number of hard sets

For endurance training:

  • keep frequency
  • shorten sessions
  • keep most work easy

Template B: reduce intensity (when stress is high)

Use this if:

  • you are sleeping badly
  • your job stress is high
  • your HRV is suppressed and you feel wired

How:

  • keep volume similar
  • remove intervals and hard efforts
  • do easy aerobic work and mobility

Template C: reduce density (for busy weeks)

If time is the issue, reduce stress by adding rest.

  • longer rest between sets
  • fewer double days
  • avoid back to back hard sessions

What not to do during a deload

Common mistakes:

  1. Replacing training with new training (a new sport, a new class)
  2. Testing your maxes
  3. Changing everything at once
  4. Trying to compensate with extra caffeine

A deload is not the week to prove anything.

Using HRV and resting heart rate without overreacting

Here is the practical approach.

The right questions

Instead of asking "Is my HRV good today?" ask:

  • Is my HRV trending down for a week?
  • Is my resting heart rate trending up?
  • Is training feeling harder at the same effort?

When two or more line up, reduce training stress.

A simple rule you can try

If all three are true for 3 to 5 days:

  • HRV below baseline
  • resting heart rate above baseline
  • workouts feel harder than normal

Then take a deload or recovery week.

Video: why deloads keep you progressing

Disclaimer: the video is for education, not medical advice.

A simple deload checklist

Use this checklist on Sunday.

  • My performance is stable
  • My easy sessions feel easy
  • My sleep is stable
  • My motivation is normal
  • My resting heart rate is near baseline
  • My HRV is near baseline

If you are missing multiple boxes, deload.

Where Century fits

Century is built to help you stop guessing.

Instead of reacting to a single metric, you can:

  • see your HRV and resting heart rate trends together
  • connect those trends to training load and sleep
  • get a clear "push" vs "reduce" suggestion based on your baseline

That is the goal: simple decisions, consistent progress.

Next reads

Century is building a calm daily health score + plan - using the watch you already wear.