“Bro, it’s just genetics.”
That sentence gets thrown around anytime someone struggles to build muscle. If progress is slow, DNA gets blamed. If someone grows fast, they’re “genetically gifted.”
But does genetics really decide your muscle growth… or is training the bigger factor?
Let’s break down the science behind genetics vs training and find out what actually limits muscle growth.
What People Mean When They Say “Bad Genetics”
When lifters complain about genetics, they’re usually referring to:
- Muscle insertions and shape
- Limb length and proportions
- Hormone levels
- Muscle fiber composition
- Recovery ability
These factors are real. Genetics do influence how your body responds to training.
But influence does not mean control.
How Muscle Growth Actually Happens
Muscle growth follows a few non-negotiable rules:
- Progressive overload
- Adequate training volume
- Sufficient protein intake
- Proper recovery and sleep
- Long-term consistency
None of these are overridden by genetics.
If these variables are missing, muscle growth stalls. When they’re optimized, most people grow far more muscle than they expect.
Genetics vs Training: What Research Shows
Scientific studies show that people respond differently to resistance training—but not in a fixed way.
So-called “low responders” often become average or high responders once training variables are adjusted, especially:
- Volume
- Load
- Intensity
- Recovery
This suggests that poor results are often due to suboptimal training, not genetic limits.
Muscle Fiber Types: Less Important Than You Think
Yes, fiber type distribution matters:
- Fast-twitch fibers grow larger
- Slow-twitch fibers resist fatigue
But fiber types are adaptable.
Training style influences how fibers behave over time, meaning smart programming matters far more than your starting genetics.
Hormones and Muscle Growth
Hormones like testosterone and IGF-1 support muscle growth, but within normal ranges, their impact is often exaggerated.
Unless someone has clinically low levels, training quality, nutrition, and recovery remain the dominant factors.
Plenty of lifters with average hormone levels out-perform “genetically gifted” individuals who train poorly.
What Genetics Really Control
Here’s where genetics truly matter:
- Muscle shape
- Insertions
- Visual symmetry
- Peak development
Two people can build similar amounts of muscle and look completely different.
That’s genetics affecting appearance, not effort or results.
Why Genetics Gets Blamed So Often
Genetics is an easy excuse.
In reality, most stalled progress comes from:
- No real progressive overload
- Junk volume without intensity
- Poor sleep and recovery
- Inconsistent nutrition
- Program hopping
Genetics doesn’t stop muscle growth.
Bad training does.
The Real Answer: Genetics Set the Ceiling, Training Builds the Muscle
Everyone has a genetic limit—but almost nobody reaches it.
For the average lifter:
- Genetics are not the bottleneck
- Execution and consistency are
Training determines how much muscle you build. Genetics only decide how that muscle looks once it’s there.
Final Takeaway
If you train intelligently, progress over time, eat enough protein, and recover properly, genetics will not prevent muscle growth.
Before blaming DNA, fix your training.
Because for most people, the limit isn’t genetics.
It’s effort.
Want to dive deeper into how your training choices impact real muscle growth? If you’re wondering whether how you eat matters just as much as how you train, check out our article “Lean Bulk vs Dirty Bulk: Which Builds More Muscle?” where we break down the science behind calorie surpluses, fat gain, and long-term progress—so you can stop guessing and start growing with a plan.
Mario Latinski is a passionate bodybuilder and fitness enthusiast dedicated to sharing science-based insights on training, nutrition, and muscle growth. With years of experience in the gym, he combines personal experience with research-backed strategies to help others build strength, improve performance, and achieve their physique goals. Outside the gym, Mario enjoys experimenting with meal planning, supplements, and fitness science to optimize results and inspire others.
