Cardio is a poor time investment, it has not been necessary for the vast majority of my clients (who are all male)Ā to get shredded, it can steal recovery capacity, serve as a distraction, andĀ the level of fitness most people will be happy with for their weekend warrior activities can be achieved by simply getting leaner and stronger.
If physique change is your priority then strength training and diet should be yourĀ primary focus. Cardio has its place, butĀ shouldn’t be thrown in randomly.
I’ve done my best to bring together all notes on cardio that were previously scattered around the site into one comprehensive guide,Ā and I’ve updated things drawing on the knowledge of some of the smartest mindsĀ in the industry in doing so. Time is a gift you will never get back, so use it wisely.
Tl;dr? Skip to the concluding recommendations.
Cardio For Fat Loss
A poor time investment
The most important part of the equation in losing weight is the energy balance. To lose fat you need to create a calorie deficit. You can come at this by either controlling your diet, increasing activity expenditure, or a combination of the two.
For more, see ‘The Ripped Body Nutrition Setup Guide‘.
An hour jog or cycle, for the average person is goingĀ burn approximately 400 kCal. That’s the equivalent of the average Starbucks muffin.
To get a pound of fat loss a week, you need to have an approximate ~3500 kCal deficit. To achieve that you could either eat a little less each day or do cardio for approximately 7 hours a week. Cardio is a poor time investment if fat loss is the goal.
Furthermore, if you throw in a lot of cardio at the start, you won’t be able to measure the results of the diet itself as it will mask the efficacy, which is a particularly important lesson to learn for those that have placed too much emphasis on the ‘increasing output’ side of the energy equation up until now (the cardio bunnies).
Point: In the future, youāre not going to have time to do cardio every day soĀ learn to set up your training minimally now,Ā so that you know how little you can get away with when the busy times come.
Cardio: Unnecessary to get shredded?
This dependsĀ on your definition of shredded really, but for the majority of men, I would say no. I’m defining ‘shredded’ here as the level of leanness 99.9% of people wouldĀ beĀ happy with, rather than the level that is necessary for the stage.
The guys in the pictures below are shredded, but not stage-ready. Cardio is oftenĀ irrelevant unless you’re already at thisĀ stage of shredded, and not necessaryĀ unless you’re looking to step on a stage.
For more, see the article, ‘When is Cardio a Valid Tool for Fat Loss with Intermittent Fasting?‘.
My experiences getting clients shredded without cardio is similar to what Menno Henselmans reports:
“Cardio is no more effective than calorie restriction at preserving muscle or getting lean. In fact, cardio significantly increases the risks of both muscle loss and overtraining.
The muscle loss from cardio is due to the interference effect. Your body cannot become good at endurance and strength training at the same time. These are mutually exclusive physiological adaptations. As a result, your body will find a compromise. Endurance and strength will both improve slightly. In a caloric deficit for an advanced trainee, the interference effect is often sufficient to prevent strength gains or even increase strength loss.
Note that I have competitive standards in mind, as most of my clients are currently physique athletes or want to look as good as one. The average fitness crowd thatās not interested in maximizing muscle mass can certainly combine cardio and strength training (Crossfit, anyone?), but if youāre serious about physique training, cardio is a necessary evil, not a desirable method of fat loss.
So if cardio sucks so much, why do it? At some point, it becomes necessary to avoid nutrient deficiencies, especially in women. Most of my male competitors get to below 2% body fat according to calipers (which of course systematically underestimate body fat percentage in this scenario) without any cardio.
However, most of my (natural) female competitors need to decrease their calories too much to get in contest shape, especially the bikini competitors who donāt have as much lean mass as the others. I very rarely have any of my female clients consume less than 1500 calories every day. It is almost impossible to consume a balanced and healthy diet at that point.
When cardio becomes necessary to maintain a healthy diet and increase the caloric deficit further, LISS cardio [low-intensity, steady-state] is highly preferable to HIIT [high-intensity interval training] and both are better than anything in between. Avoiding the interference effect requires using a stimulus that is similar to strength training (HIIT) or a stimulus that does not require much adaptation at all (LISS). Avoiding the interference effect altogether is preferable to minimize it, so LISS is best in this regard.
The female physiology is well adapted to endurance training and fat burning, so women do even better on LISS than men.
Thirdly, HIIT increases the risk of overtraining and injuries with no advantage to LISS other than saving time.
In summary, advanced male lifters generally donāt need cardio. Women tend to need cardio in the final weeks of contest prep to avoid starving themselves and in that case, LISS beats HIIT.”
LISS beats HIIT
That last part reminds me of this by Martin Berkhan,
“Strength is strength. Cardio is cardio. Don’t mix, keep them separate, and use cardio sparingly on a diet or if your primary goal is strength and muscle gain.
If you’re adding 2-3 sessions of HIIT to your 3 sessions of weights, it is almost comparable to adding 2-3 days of weights. The keyword is “almost”, I’m obviously not drawing direct comparisons. That’s all fine and dandy if you think working out 5-6 days/week is a good idea on a diet. But I don’t think anyone – no matter what level of experience – needs more than 3 days a week in the gym when cutting. (Yes, this goes for competitors and beginners alike.)
In conclusion, if conditioning is not terribly important for you, if your goal is really about getting shredded while keeping your muscle, I highly suggest limiting moderate to high-intensity cardio on a diet – or ditch it completely. Save it for some other time when your recovery is good and not limited by your diet. A calorie deficit is a recovery deficit. Avoid deficit spending.ā
Cardio For Physique Development
Endurance training compromises strength work
This is the interference effect that Menno talked about that Martin mentioned also:
“The mechanisms furthering adaptations in one trait – AMPK for mitochondrial biogenesis for endurance, suppress those that would have allowed optimal adaptation in the latter case, mTOR for muscle protein synthesis – all things being equal – looking at concurrent endurance/strength training vs strength training sans endurance training.
“It should be noted that it’s primarily endurance training that impairs strength and muscle growth, not the other way around (strength training even has some modest, but positive effect on endurance in beginners).”
If you chase both, you will compromise both. That’s not to say that cardio doesn’t have a place…
Cardio work can help push through strength plateaus
“Aerobic exercise can actually make you a more efficient lifter, by helping increase your training density, volume, and frequency by aiding in recovery during your workouts and between your workouts. Being able to work harder and recover from more work is the simplest way to make more progress.ā – Greg Nuckols, one of the strongest drug-free lifters in the world.
“This is assuming you’re eating enough to recover from your training,” Greg adds. So don’t make cardio additions as an attempt to bust through a strength plateau when in a calorie deficit.
The type of aerobic work you perform has an impact
Running is particularly bad for lower strength acquisition.
āRunning has a significant eccentric component. Your muscles have to decelerate your legs as they hit the ground, which causes more muscle damage. This hinders recovery from lower-body training. Cycling, on the other hand, doesnāt increase muscle damage significantly,” says Greg Nuckols.
If you keep your steady-state cardio sessions low impact (for example, swimming, rowing, or brisk walking) your lifting shouldnāt suffer.
Cardio for Health
People will insist they wish to do cardio for their health. What people generally mean is one or both of the following:
- They wish to reduce their risk of premature death due to heart disease,
- They wish to be able to accept an invite for a hike in the mountains on the weekend without fearing the feeling that their lungs are about to explode and they will embarrass themselves by holding up the group.
The best thing you can do to improve your blood lipid profile if you are overweight is to get leaner. – A strong heart running on a system with clogged, dirty pipes isn’t much good to you.
Strength training and getting leaner will improve your endurance. – Losing the 40lb rucksack of fat that you are carrying each day while getting stronger is going to do far more for your joints and everyday movement than aerobic work alone will.
I have worked with a lot of clients who have hired me to help them pass physical preparation tests for various branches of the military, fire service, and police force in several different countries. The focus is nearly always to strip off the unnecessary fat first to make them pound for pound stronger, then putting conditioning work in at the last point possible.
Why strength and fat loss first, and then the conditioning?
Cardiovascular endurance comes mostly from chemical and metabolic adaptations in the body, which can happen relatively quickly. As the two are better separated, I focus on the fat loss first and ramp up the cardio much later in the programming.
Sweat and or pain should not be the goals of your training, adaptation and progression should. You may be surprised just how far focus on simply getting leaner and stronger will take you to whizzing up mountains with a backpack on the weekend, …if that is what takes your fancy.
Summary: Recommendations on Cardio for the Physique-Focused Trainee
Dieting
- Diet should be the primary means of creating the calorie deficit required for fat loss. If you set things up right, unless you’re looking to get on a stage, most men likely won’t need cardio at all.
- If cardio is necessary, LISS low-intensity steady state) work such as brisk walks, rowing or swimming is the way to go. Avoid running.
Bulking
- Focus on strength acquisition for physique development.
- Cardio can be used to help with this, but it’s prudent to change other aspects of programming in your strength training first (guide). Cardio is likely not necessary until you’re into the intermediate phase where some form of periodization is needed.
- When introducing cardio work, make it low impact, low intensity; like cycling, rowing or swimming. Avoid running due to the eccentric component.
- Avoid HIIT work unless conditioning is absolutely necessary for your sport. Again, make it low impact work if possible, like the cross-trainer, cycling, or swimming. Save your knees.
- Add in carbs to make up for the additional energy expenditure of cardio work, but beware of the tendency to overestimate the calorie burn from aerobic activity.
If you are an endurance guy looking to push your physique to the next level, consider putting your endurance goals on hold for the short-term, do the minimum you can do to maintain a level of stamina you deem tolerable, and put your focus into chasing strength gains. – Endurance goals can always be chased down later, and you’ll likely quickly surpass your previous records because you’ll be working with a stronger base.
Hope you found that useful. Questions welcomed in the comments. – Andy.
Privacy policy.