The Real Power Of Morning Cardio

Nutrition on point…
Training hard…
Still not getting the results you want?

Morning cardio could be the missing piece.

Now while the jury is still out on whether morning cardio burns significantly more body fat than cardio later in the day…

What it DOES do incredibly well is:

  • Create momentum early in the day
  • Improve discipline and consistency
  • Increase overall energy expenditure
  • Improve mood and focus
  • Create a strong metabolic effect for hours afterwards

It’s the old saying:

Win the morning, win the day.

And honestly?

Getting your cardio done early means there’s far less chance of life getting in the way later.

Personally, I’m a big fan of three styles depending on the goal, fitness level, recovery, and time available:

SECTION 1 — 15-Minute Intervals

Best for:

  • busy professionals
  • fat loss
  • momentum
  • short on time
  • increasing work capacity

Structure

  • 2-minute warm-up
  • 15 sec hard / 45 sec recovery
  • 12 rounds
  • 1-minute cool-down

Key coaching point

Intensity matters more than duration.

This is NOT:

  • cruising
  • scrolling Instagram
  • casual effort

You should be cooked.

Best exercise options

  • Bike
  • Assault bike
  • Rowing
  • Running
  • Skipping
  • Ski erg
  • Battle Ropes

My preference

Low-skill options early morning.

Less injury risk when half asleep.

Bike > sprinting for most busy men over 35.

Common mistake

Going too long.

If intensity is high enough:
15 minutes is plenty.

SECTION 2 — Norwegian 4×4

Best for:

  • conditioning
  • VO2 max
  • cardiovascular fitness
  • athletic performance

Structure

  • 4 min hard
  • 3 min recovery
  • x4 rounds

Intensity

Hard enough that:

  • conversation becomes difficult
  • breathing is elevated

• • but sustainable for all 4 rounds

Best exercise options

  • Incline walk
  • Bike
  • Rowing
  • Run/walk
  • Ski erg

Why I like it

Huge cardiovascular return without huge session duration.

Very efficient.

Common mistake

Going too hard in round 1 and dying.

Pacing matters.

SECTION 3 — LISS (Low Intensity Steady State)

Best for:

  • recovery
  • stress reduction
  • extra calorie expenditure
  • beginners
  • improving aerobic base
  • weekends

Target heart rate

Generally:

  • Zone 2
  • roughly 120–140 bpm for most people

OR:

  • struggle to hold a conversation
  • slightly out of breath

Best exercise options

  • Walking
  • Incline treadmill
  • Bike
  • Light row
  • Swimming

Why I like it

Very low fatigue cost.

This matters MASSIVELY for men over 35.

Especially those who:

  • have high stress
  • poor sleep
  • busy jobs
  • do hard weight training

Common mistake

Getting the intensity right. 

If it turns into a grind…
it’s no longer LISS.

If you aren’t getting your HR up, you’re not doing much. 

A heart rate monitor is therefore a good investment. 

So Which One Should You Choose?

Short on time?

→ 15-min intervals

Want conditioning/performance?

→ Norwegian 4×4

Need recovery/fat loss/stress management?

→ LISS

My honest recommendation?

Use all 3 strategically.

That’s usually where the magic happens.

Example One

Monday → 15-min intervals

Tuesday → Weights

Wednesday → Norwegian 4×4

Thursday → Weights

Friday → 15-min intervals

Saturday → Weights

Sunday → LISS

Example Two

Monday → Weights

Tuesday → Weights

Wednesday → Norwegian 4×4 / 15-min intervals

Thursday → Weights

Friday → Weights

Saturday → Off / Stretch

Sunday → LISS

Example Three

Monday → Weights

Tuesday → 15-min intervals

Wednesday → Weights

Thursday → Norwegian 4×4

Friday → Weights

Saturday → Off / Stretch

Sunday → LISS

FINAL TAKEAWAY

The best cardio program:

  • isn’t the hardest
  • isn’t the trendiest
  • isn’t the one that destroys you

It’s the one:

  • you recover from
  • fits your lifestyle
  • and can stay consistent with

That’s what actually drives results long term.

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