Time under tension: the honest guide to TUT, TUL, and super slow training
Time under tension (TUT) is the most misunderstood number in strength training. Here's what it actually measures, the zone that drives hypertrophy, and why super slow training is the cheat code for natural lifters.
Almost every serious lifter has heard the phrase "time under tension." Almost none of them measure it. The number that gets logged in every workout app on the market. Reps × sets. Is a proxy for time under tension, and a bad one. Two trainees can do the same eight reps and load the muscle for radically different amounts of time. One of them grows. The other goes home tired.
What time under tension actually means
Time under tension (TUT), sometimes called time under load (TUL), is the number of seconds the working muscle is producing force against resistance during a set. It is not the time you spend in the gym. It is not the time between racking and unracking. It is the actual seconds the muscle is loaded.
A set of ten reps at a fast, bouncy tempo might give you eighteen seconds of real TUT. The same ten reps at a 10/10 super slow cadence. Ten seconds up, ten seconds down. Gives you over two hundred. Same weight, same reps. An order of magnitude more stimulus.
The hypertrophy zone
The exercise-science consensus, summarised most clearly in McGuff and Little's Body by Science, is that mechanical tension between roughly 40 and 90 seconds of continuous, near-maximal effort produces the largest hypertrophic response in a single set. Below 40 seconds you're training neural strength without much muscle growth. Above 90 you're training endurance.
- 0–40 sec: neural / strength-dominant. Useful, but small hypertrophy signal.
- 40–90 sec: the hypertrophy sweet spot. Maximum tension, maximum metabolic load.
- 90+ sec: endurance-dominant. Local muscular endurance climbs; growth signal drops.
If the goal is to build muscle as quickly as possible, your job per set is to stay in the 40–90 second band and arrive at true muscular failure inside it.
Super slow training, explained
Super slow training is the simplest way to land in the hypertrophy zone every single set. The classic prescription. Popularised by Ken Hutchins in the 1980s and refined by the HIT community since. Is ten seconds on the concentric, ten seconds on the eccentric, no pause at either end. Every rep takes twenty seconds. Four honest reps lands you at eighty seconds of TUT, dead centre in the growth band.
It also eliminates momentum. Most lifters dramatically overestimate how much work their muscle is doing because kinetic energy carries the bar through the sticking point. Slow cadence removes that subsidy. The muscle has to move the weight from a dead stop, every rep.
Why TUT is the safest way to lift heavy
Peak joint forces in a lift are proportional to acceleration, not weight. A 100 lb dumbbell moving slowly puts less peak stress on a tendon than a 50 lb dumbbell being yanked through a curl. This is why slow-cadence trainees can train heavy into their seventies without the chronic shoulder, knee, and lower-back issues that end most conventional lifters' careers.
Slow cadence turns a moderate weight into a brutal stimulus. Without ever giving your joints the kind of force they can't absorb.
How to measure your own TUT
You only need two numbers: weight and the seconds-to-failure on the last set. A stopwatch is enough, but it is mentally taxing. You have to count cadence, push to failure, and time the set simultaneously. This is exactly the gap Intensiq fills: the app counts cadence out loud, tracks TUL automatically, and uses your time-to-failure (not your rep count) to write next week's prescription. Land in the 40–90 second band on a movement, and the weight goes up next session. Miss it, and the weight holds.
The takeaway
If you measure anything in the gym, measure time under tension. Reps and sets are downstream of it. Once you start training to TUT. Slow cadence, one honest set, true failure. You'll need a fraction of the gym time and you'll see the strength curve climb faster than you did on any volume programme.
Further reading: The 10/10 protocol, What true muscular failure actually feels like, Why twelve minutes a week is enough.