What is the Best Time to Schedule Cardio Training?

01-09-2009

Your Questions

I get plenty of questions in various comments throughout the website, but I also get comments and questions via the Project Swole Contact Form.

Generally I address those questions through e-mail, but often I do not have the time to reply to each and every question personally.

The category, Your Health Questions is a more proactive approach to answering your questions so that everyone can benefit from the Q & A.

Scott wrote:

“First off very good site, very informative.

I am 33 5-11 170lbs. I just went from a split where I was doing 30 min low intensity cardio after the work out. I have been enjoying the full body workouts; I feel I get more out of it.

I am trying to maintain the muscle I have and get more ripped toned. Should I keep doing a low intensity cardio session after my work out or should I move to HIIT or some sort of other interval training on the off days?

I always read cardio after lifting or in the am is the best. So will I still burn fat doing cardio on the off days? Help!!”


Response:

First off, thank you for the kind words. I’m glad I can help someone with my babbling.

Second, I agree with you about full body workout routines. I find full body training to be far more effective at stimulating all kinds of gains than a traditional split routine.

Now, regarding your cardio questions, I have a couple responses and then I will discuss my reasoning:

  • My opinion is that you should focus more on high intensity interval training (HIIT) than on aerobic cardio.
  • If you insist on doing aerobic cardio at the same time as weight training, then it should be performed after weight training, but then you have to accept the drawbacks of doing cardio after weight training.
  • If you insist on doing aerobic cardio, not at the same time as weight training, but on the same day as weight training, it should be performed in the morning, on an empty stomach.
  • If you insist on doing aerobic cardio, but you don’t care when, then it should be performed on an off day, in the morning, on an empty stomach.
  • If you plan doing HIIT, it should not be performed after a workout.
  • Cardio in general works best when performed 8-10 hours before or after weight training, or on a separate day.

What Exactly is HIIT?

High Intensity Interval Training (HIIT) is cardiovascular exercise that predominantly uses the anerobic energy system. HIIT includes repeated short bursts of maximum intensity exercise followed by short duration minimal intensity exercise.

Here are some HIIT ideas for example:

  • Interval sprints – sprint for 60 seconds, walk for 60 seconds, repeat.
  • Stair sprints – sprint up a set of stairs, walk back down, repeat.
  • Bicycle sprints – pedal as hard as you can for 60 seconds, pedal slow for 60 seconds, repeat.
  • Swim sprints – swim as hard as you can for 60 seconds, tread water for 60 seconds, repeat.
  • Row sprints – row as hard as you can for 60 seconds, row lightly for 60 seconds, repeat.

Get the idea? You can pick exercises to target specific body parts in case of soreness or other factors. What I mean is that rowing would target upper body, which running would target lower body, swimming would target the whole body, etc…

Why Choose HIIT Over Aerobic Cardio

Simply put, HIIT helps maintain and sometimes build muscle, while aerobic cardio breaks down muscle.

HIIT promotes strength increases because you are using 100% of strength for a very short duration. By stimulating the neurological pathways with HIIT you are promoting speed, strength, and power gains.

With aerobic cardio you are only training for muscular endurance, which is fine if you are a marathon runner or a triathlete.

HIIT also burns more calories than aerobic cardio in the same amount of time. This is a known fact.

Aerobic vs. Anaerobic Cardio: Who would you rather look like?

Female Sprinters

Female Marathon Runners

Male Sprinter

Male Marathon Runner

Why Cardio Before Weight Training is Less Effective

Here are the reasons why you should not perform cardio for a long duration immediately before weight training:

  • You will use up your glycogen stores before lifting, which means your body will draw energy from amino acids in the body. In other words it will start breaking down muscle tissue for energy.
  • You will be tired and unable to devote maximum intensity to lifting.
  • Mentally, you will be less willing to lift and focus on weight training, because you have already worked out.
  • Lactic acid will build up in your system and because you are switching from the aerobic energy system to the anaerobic energy system, there will be no way to flush the lactic acid and your muscles will not function at their optimum.

I do however, advocate warming up for 5-10 minutes at a low intensity before lifting.

Why Cardio After Weight Training is Less Effective

Here are the reasons why you should not perform cardio for a long duration immediately after the workout:

  • You will miss your opportunity to drink your high GI post workout shake within 20 minutes after weight training, when you need it most.
  • If you do drink your high GI post workout shake, the cardio will burn up that glycogen that your muscles so desperately need, thus eliminating the entire goal of the post workout drink.
  • After a training session your body is catabolic. Tissue, including muscle fiber, is breaking down. You want to reverse that process and jump start protein synthesis ASAP. By continuing to exercise you are just prolonging the catabolic state.

The only thing I would recommend is to finish your workout off with 10-15 minutes of low intensity aerobic cardio in order to cool down and flush the lactic acid out of your system. This is the one thing, besides breaking down muscle tissue, that aerobic cardio is good at.

Why Not to Use HIIT Training After Weight Training

HIIT training uses the same energy system as weight training (anaerobic). Since you have already exhausted your glycogen and ATP stores from weight training, doing HIIT after a training session will not allow you to use maximum intensity.

Instead, choose HIIT training for your AM workouts if you do weight training at high, or for your PM workouts if you do weight training in the morning, or use HIIT on off-day workouts when you aren’t weight training at all.

This will allow you to have completely replenished energy sources for both your HIIT sessions and weight training.

When to Choose Aerobic Cardio Over HIIT

Obviously you don’t want to use 3 days of intense weight training alternating with 3 days of HIIT training. In my opinion this would ultimately lead to overtraining because you are using your anaerobic energy system and causing intense trauma to the muscles every single day.

Instead I would use one aerobic session once a week, in the middle of the week, or to break up several days of high intensity training (weights and/or HIIT) in a row.

I also mentioned that there is some benefit to doing 10-15 minutes of low intensity aerobic cardio after weight training.

Sample Workout Routines

For the aerobic cardio fanatic who has convinced themselves that they need to do endurance cardio to lose weight, here are some routines that include the maximum amount of aerobic exercise that I would ever recommend for the specific training cycle.

A 3 day per week routine might look like this:

20 minutes of HIIT in the morning after a small snack, followed by breakfast; 45 minutes of full body weight training at night, followed by 10 minutes of aerobic cardio immediately after the workout, followed by a post-workout drink filled with high GI carbs and BCAAs.
Off
45 minutes of aerobic cardio in the morning on an empty stomach, followed by breakfast; 45 minutes of full body weight training at night, followed by a post-workout drink filled with high GI carbs and BCAAs.
Off
20 minutes of HIIT in the morning after a small snack, followed by breakfast; 45 minutes of full body weight training at night, followed by 10 minutes of aerobic cardio immediately after the workout, followed by a post-workout drink filled with high GI carbs and BCAAs.
Off

A 4 day per week routine might look like this:

20 minutes of HIIT in the morning after a small snack, followed by breakfast; 40 minutes of upper body weight training at night, followed by 10 minutes of aerobic cardio immediately after the workout, followed by a post-workout drink filled with high GI carbs and BCAAs.
40 minutes of aerobic cardio in the morning on an empty stomach, followed by breakfast; 40 minutes of lower body weight training at night, followed by a post-workout drink filled with high GI carbs and BCAAs.
Off
20 minutes of HIIT in the morning after a small snack, followed by breakfast; 40 minutes of upper body weight training at night, followed by 10 minutes of aerobic cardio immediately after the workout, followed by a post-workout drink filled with high GI carbs and BCAAs.
40 minutes of lower body weight training at night, followed by 10 minutes of aerobic cardio immediately after the workout, followed by a post-workout drink filled with high GI carbs and BCAAs.
Off

A 5 day per week routine might look like this:

45 minutes of full body weight training, followed by 10 minutes of aerobic cardio immediately after the workout, followed by a post-workout drink filled with high GI carbs and BCAAs.
25 minutes of HIIT anytime during the day, followed by a post-workout drink or a low fat, medium carb, high protein meal.
45 minutes of full body weight training, followed by 10 minutes of aerobic cardio immediately after the workout, followed by a post-workout drink filled with high GI carbs and BCAAs.
25 minutes of HIIT anytime during the day, followed by a post-workout drink or a low fat, medium carb, high protein meal.
45 minutes of full body weight training, followed by 10 minutes of aerobic cardio immediately after the workout, followed by a post-workout drink filled with high GI carbs and BCAAs.
Off

A 6 day per week routine might look like this:

45 minutes of full body weight training, followed by 10 minutes of aerobic cardio immediately after the workout, followed by a post-workout drink filled with high GI carbs and BCAAs.
25 minutes of HIIT anytime during the day, followed by a post-workout drink or a low fat, medium carb, high protein meal.
45 minutes of full body weight training, followed by 10 minutes of aerobic cardio immediately after the workout, followed by a post-workout drink filled with high GI carbs and BCAAs.
45 minutes of aerobic cardio in the morning on an empty stomach, followed by breakfast.
45 minutes of full body weight training, followed by a post-workout drink filled with high GI carbs and BCAAs.
25 minutes of HIIT anytime during the day, followed by a post-workout drink or a low fat, medium carb, high protein meal.
Off

So, that’s it.

Keep the following tips in mind:

  • HIIT = speed, strength, power gains. Burns more calories than endurance cardio.
  • Aerobic = endurance gains. Good for flushing lactic acid.
  • Growth comes from rest and recovery, not from working out twice a day, six days a week.
  • Nutrition is extremely important, especially when exercising frequently.

Similar Posts:

  • Share/Bookmark

Comments:

One Response to “What is the Best Time to Schedule Cardio Training?”


  1. This is actually my very first comment any blog anywhere, Just joined the community, These are very good tips for a first timer like myself. Thank You for the tips.

Leave a Reply