⬅️Guide

app to track lifting progress

👤
Trider TeamApr 20, 2026

AI Summary

Most weightlifting apps are bloated, distracting messes. A great app should be a simple tool that makes logging fast and progress obvious, helping you get stronger without the noise.

A Weightlifting App That Doesn't Suck

It should be easy to find a good app for tracking your lifts. It’s not.

Most are bloated messes, designed by people who don’t seem to spend much time in a gym. They’re crammed with useless features, make logging a set a total pain, and hide the one thing you actually want: a simple chart showing your numbers going up.

I remember sitting in my 2011 Honda Civic at 4:17 PM, scrolling through the app store, just downloading and deleting one after another. They all promised to "revolutionize" my training. One had a social feed I didn't want. Another spammed me with ads mid-set. A third tried to plan my workouts for me with some fancy AI, completely missing the point.

You track your workouts to see if what you're doing is actually working. You can’t progressively overload what you don’t measure. It’s that simple. You need a feedback loop. Am I getting stronger? Is the volume going up? Without data, you're just guessing.

Ditch the Noise. Focus on What Matters.

A good lifting app does three things well:

  1. Fast Logging: It has to be faster than a notebook. If you're fighting a clunky interface between sets, the app has failed. Logging sets, reps, and weight should take seconds.
  2. Clear Progress: It needs to show you your history for any exercise, instantly. Graphs of your estimated one-rep max, total volume, and PRs are what keep you going.
  3. No Distractions: Nobody needs a social network for their deadlifts. They need a tool. A great app gets out of your way so you can focus on lifting.
Progressive Overload Wk 1 Wk 2 Wk 3 Wk 4 Wk 5 Wk 6 Wk 7

The Power of a Simple Streak

Consistency is everything. More than your program, more than your diet—just showing up is most of the battle. A simple streak counter, just a number showing how many weeks in a row you've hit the gym, can be surprisingly powerful. It gamifies things just enough. You don't want to break the chain.

But if you do miss a day, it's just a data point. The app should be a log, not a judge.

What About the Other Stuff?

Reminders, rest timers, massive exercise libraries—that stuff is nice to have. Some apps, like Hevy, integrate social features without making them obnoxious. But these are secondary. The main job is, and always will be, tracking the work.

The best apps, like Strong or Hevy, get this. They build everything around a clean interface and solid tracking. They know their job is to be a digital notebook that makes useful graphs. That's it.

The best tool is the one you actually use. Whether it's a good app or a simple notebook, writing your workouts down creates accountability. It turns effort into data you can use to get stronger.

More guides

View all

Write your own guide.

Download Trider to access AI tools and publish your routines.

Get it on Play Store