The Energy Equation: Fuel Your Lifts First
Think of your body's energy like the battery on your phone. When you start your workout at 100%, you want to dedicate that peak power to your most demanding task. For most people, that task is strength training. Lifting weights is an anaerobic activity,
meaning it relies on readily available energy stores, primarily glycogen, in your muscles. These explosive, short-duration efforts require maximum force and neurological drive. If you spend 30 minutes on a treadmill before you even pick up a dumbbell, you're depleting those precious glycogen stores. By the time you get to your squats or bench presses, your muscles are already partially fatigued. Research shows that this can limit the amount of weight you can lift and the number of repetitions you can perform, ultimately hindering your strength gains over time. Hitting the weights first ensures your muscles are fresh and fully fuelled to handle the heavy loads necessary to build strength and muscle.
Hormones at Play: Building vs. Breaking Down
Beyond just energy, your workout order sends different signals to your body. Strength training is primarily an anabolic process, meaning it signals your body to build tissue, like muscle. Conversely, prolonged cardio is a catabolic process, which involves breaking down molecules for energy. When you perform a long cardio session before lifting, you can create a hormonal environment that's less than ideal for muscle growth. Elevated cortisol levels from extended cardio can interfere with the muscle-building signals generated by resistance training. Some research suggests doing strength work prior to your cardio session allows you to lift heavier, improving strength over time, without negatively impacting your cardio gains. One study even found that lifting weights before a cardio session can enhance fat burning during the subsequent aerobic exercise. By prioritizing lifting, you set a muscle-building tone for your workout, then use cardio to tap into fat stores for fuel.
The Exception: When Cardio Comes First
This isn't a completely one-sided debate. There are specific scenarios where leading with cardio is the logical choice. If your primary goal is to improve your endurance—for example, if you're training for a 10K race or a marathon—you should do your cardio first. Your running or cycling performance will be highest when your body is fresh, and you don't want to start a long run on legs that are already tired from heavy squats. Doing cardio first allows you to sustain your effort for longer and maximize your aerobic conditioning. However, it's important to distinguish between a dedicated cardio workout and a warm-up. A light, 5-to-10-minute session on the bike or treadmill is a great way to increase your body temperature and prepare your muscles for lifting without causing significant fatigue. The key is to keep the warm-up short and low-intensity, saving your real effort for the weights.
Putting It Into Practice: How to Structure Your Workout
So, what does the ideal workout look like? It depends on your main objective. For general fitness, where you want to build both strength and cardiovascular health, the consensus points to lifting first. If your goal is primarily fat loss and building lean muscle: Start with a 5-10 minute light cardio warm-up. Follow this with 40-50 minutes of strength training, focusing on compound exercises like squats, deadlifts, and presses that work multiple muscle groups. Finish your session with 15-20 minutes of moderate-intensity cardio or a shorter, high-intensity interval training (HIIT) session. This approach depletes glycogen during your lifts and encourages your body to burn more fat during the concluding cardio segment. If your goal is maximum strength and muscle gain: Your focus should be almost entirely on the weights. After your warm-up, dedicate your session to your strength program. If you choose to add cardio, keep it separate. Many find it beneficial to perform cardio on non-lifting days or several hours apart from their strength session to avoid any potential "interference effect" where cardio might slightly blunt muscle-building signals.
















