Best exercise for fat burning
happyvez
Posts: 5 Member
What is the best exercise to burn fat?
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Replies
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Fork put-downs and table push-aways. Fat is lost via a caloric deficit (eating less than you burn). It's a lot quicker and easier to cut 500 calories from your intake than it is to burn 500 calories via exercise.
The best exercise to do to create a calorie burn to help make that deficit is whatever exercise you enjoy and will do most often and consistently.26 -
You might like interval training, it's very effective at burning calories. There are lots of articles out there about HIIT: High Intensity Interval Training, and there are apps to help. Basically, it's sprinting, then walking, then sprinting, then walking. You can do the equivalent on bikes, swimming, etc., too.
Doing strength exercises on major muscle groups helps your body burn fat, too - not during the exercise per se, but the more lean body mass you have, the better your body is at using energy.19 -
Jumping rope, this is my go to cardio fat burner.8
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I think HIIT is one of the best exercises for burning. I do 30 minutes with 1 minute 45 seconds and 30 seconds intervals and it allows me to burn fat really fast17
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VeggieBarbells wrote: »Jumping rope, this is my go to cardio fat burner.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
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I think HIIT is one of the best exercises for burning. I do 30 minutes with 1 minute 45 seconds and 30 seconds intervals and it allows me to burn fat really fast
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
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You do know that your calorie deficit is already built in to your calorie goal and that you are supposed to be eating back your exercise calories anyway?
Exercise for fitness and health (hopefully enjoyment too) and as a nice bonus you get to eat more while still losing weight/fat.6 -
This thread reminds me of the nonsensical heart rate chart on my gym's elliptical machines. It's something like 70% is fat burning zone, 80% is performance improvement zone, and 100% is aerobic something or other zone. Like, I'm burning fat at one level of exertion but not improving my aerobic performance and working less hard will burn fat etc. What is actually consistent and logical is that the harder and longer I work the more calories it tells me I've burned.2
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I enjoy spirited hours long bike rides. And long ski tours. Can burn huge numbers of calories because I can do them so long; I can (and I'm willing to) devote lots of time to these because I love doing them.
No exercise is intently better than any other for fat loss, it's purely a matter of calories burned vs eaten.2 -
Running to the kitchen and lifting your food scale out of the cabinet, then running back to your computer or lifting your mobile device to log your food. These seem like simple exercises, but they work amazingly well!10
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Fat loss happens when you consume fewer calories than you expend.
In respect to fat/weight loss the fuel source is immaterial (the fat burning zone is really only of significance to endurance athletes as your body can usually store enough glycogen to fuel 90 minutes or so of moderate exercise, even a 140lb marathoner with 10% body fat has thousands of fat calories available o fuel their run)
Having said that, studies have demonstrated that people who exercise regularly are more likely to keep the weight they've lost in the long term.4 -
BrianSharpe wrote: »Fat loss happens when you consume fewer calories than you expend.
In respect to fat/weight loss the fuel source is immaterial (the fat burning zone is really only of significance to endurance athletes as your body can usually store enough glycogen to fuel 90 minutes or so of moderate exercise, even a 140lb marathoner with 10% body fat has thousands of fat calories available o fuel their run)
Having said that, studies have demonstrated that people who exercise regularly are more likely to keep the weight they've lost in the long term.
I believe those studies also showed that the majority of maintainers identified walking as their primary form of exercise. So although it might not burn the most calories, figuring out how to work more walking into one's daily routine is probably a good place to start.4 -
I could burn more calories faster by running than cycling, but I don't enjoy running and I love cycling. In reality I won't run more than half an hour (last 5k took 29:12) but I'll ride for two hours after work if I can.
@MegaMooseEsq if walking is something you'll do (not you specifically), the real calories from that trump the potential calories from something else.
Also, even as a cyclist, I walk throughout the day for all kinds of reasons and it's amazing how it adds up.4 -
What is the best exercise to burn fat?
Exercise increases energy expenditure....exercise in and of itself does not result in fat loss/burning fat. I'm in maintenance and I exercise regularly...I'm not losing fat because I'm not in a calorie deficit...exercise does not default to a calorie deficit.
Calories are a unit of energy...when you consume more energy than your body requires to maintain the status quo, that excess energy is stored as body fat...it's stored energy...basically your backup generator. When you consume less energy than your body requires, that deficiency has to be made up...so your backup generator kicks on and you burn excess body fat for energy.
As exercise goes, you should do whatever you enjoy doing...that's pretty much the only way you're going to stick to anything. Getting in regular exercise shouldn't be thought of as some temporary thing while you're trying to lose weight...exercise is forever and IMO as as, if not more important to maintaining weight than losing weight.2 -
NorthCascades wrote: »I could burn more calories faster by running than cycling, but I don't enjoy running and I love cycling. In reality I won't run more than half an hour (last 5k took 29:12) but I'll ride for two hours after work if I can.
@MegaMooseEsq if walking is something you'll do (not you specifically), the real calories from that trump the potential calories from something else.
Also, even as a cyclist, I walk throughout the day for all kinds of reasons and it's amazing how it adds up.
Oh, absolutely. I was more trying to speak to your last sentence, that more walking is something that most people could benefit from working into their routine, on top of whatever else they might be doing for fitness. And walking seems to be a form of exercise many people find sustainable, which really does seem to be the key to success.3 -
I do stuff like park on the far edge of the lot, walk to run errands when possible, etc. I don't think of any of this as exercise. Before I had a tracker, I didn't think of any of this period.
At the end of a typical day that I went to work, I'll burn 400 to 500 calories just from walking. At my weight that's 4 to 5 miles. I have a thousand steps when I get to my desk. It adds up. It's easy and refreshing and relaxing most of the time too. I don't have to put special clothes on to hi for a walk. There's really a lot going for it.3 -
Energy deficit...0
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Deficit causes your body to burn stored fat. Exercise just increases the deficit and may increase your resting burn. That said, I enjoy going out for a run. I also burn calories painting the house but that is less burn and less fun.1
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Exercise doesn't burn fat per se... it burns calories. Where those calories come from is depending on a number of factors. Keep you diet/intake in check, exercise for your goals, and be consistent. That's the recipe.0
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Whatever exercise:
Gets you to an aerobic range for an extended period.
Is fun! If you don't like what your doing you will eventually stop.
Better to do workouts you enjoy even if it isn't the highest calorie burning workout.
The least calorie burning workout is the one you don't do.4 -
as most have said..there are certainly exercises that burn more calories than others but to lose fat, you just have to consume less calories than you take in.
I have tried everything and to be honest, choose something that you can stick with because if you are not enjoying it....you will not keep it up.1 -
HIIT but definitely weights as well. Resistance training builds lean muscle which ups your metabolism which means you burn more calories while you're resting. That combined with the cardio is what works best for fat burning.2
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Whatever gets you moving consistently0
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I blast the most calories when I'm roller skating. It's very easy on my joints but a great leg and core workout. I try and skate between 4-8 miles twice a week.0
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