The Full Circle Podcast

Are Morning or Evening Workouts Better?

Full Circle Endurance Episode 35

Is it best to complete workouts in the morning or the evening?  This question has been debated among athletes and coaches for a long time and the opinions on this topic vary widely.  After 10+ coaching endurance athletes, a trend has stood out that indicates which might actually be best for a lot of athletes.



Read this Coach Tip Tuesday: 

https://www.fullcircleendurance.com/blog/coach-tip-tuesday-are-morning-or-evening-workouts-better 


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Disclaimer: The information shared in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your qualified healthcare provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition or health goals. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you heard on this podcast. Reliance on any information provided is solely at your own risk.

(0:04 - 0:19)
Hello, and welcome to the Full Circle Podcast, your source for insights into the science and art of endurance sports training and racing. I'm your host, Coach Laura Henry. Today is Coach Tip Tuesday.

(0:20 - 0:53)
When it comes to endurance sports training, there are seemingly endless opinions about just about every aspect of training out there. And a lot of these pieces of advice end up contradicting each other. This can make it very, very confusing for athletes of all abilities and experience levels, but it's especially confusing for those who are new to endurance sports training or to those athletes who just aren't as experienced or as educated about what it takes to successfully train for races and goals.

(0:53 - 1:11)
A topic that has been pretty hotly debated over the years is whether workouts are best done in the morning or in the evening. I actually prefer to refer to this as start of day and end of day. And this is because many people work nontraditional schedules and therefore sleep at nontraditional hours.

(1:11 - 1:30)
The time of day relative to when someone is regularly sleeping is what we're really referring to when we talk about morning or evening workouts versus the actual time of day. Ask one person and they'll swear that morning or start of day workouts are the only way to go. Others will say that evening or end of day workouts are best.

(1:30 - 1:49)
As I often tell athletes, the best is actually subjective. We want a quick and easy answer to the question, what is the best? And clickbait articles, social media influencers, and others really capitalize on this desire. But the truth is that the real answer is rarely definitive and it is often much more nuanced.

(1:49 - 2:09)
For instance, the best training plan is the one that you will stick to consistently. This very well may mean that the best training plan for you looks significantly different than the best training plan for your best friend, your brother, your colleague, your mentor, or another athlete. Along those same lines, the best time of day to train is also relatively subjective.

(2:09 - 2:38)
When athletes, and particularly non-elite age group athletes, ask me about what the best time of day is to train, I default to advising them to look at their personal schedules and to plan to do their workouts at the time of day that is most practical for them. The more that workouts fit into their life versus trying to fit their life in and around training or workouts, the easier it is mentally and logistically to do workouts. And therefore, the more likely athletes are to actually do them.

(2:39 - 3:04)
The most practical time of day might be at the start of the day before the kids get up or before you head in for a 12-hour shift, or it might be later in the day after the kids go to bed or when you get home from your day. Each person is going to have a schedule that works best for them and for their family. Yes, it is true that there are very real and valid reasons for training at specific times of day, especially when it comes to specific preparation for your race day itself.

(3:04 - 3:26)
This is especially true if your race will be starting later in the day, or if part of your race takes place at a later time in the day, but nothing. And I mean nothing, not even race day specifics matters more than consistency and training. And this means that getting in the highest percentage of your planned workouts possible is really important.

(3:26 - 3:54)
Consequently, when athletes ask me whether it's best to train in the morning or the evening, I advise them to choose a time of day that works consistently for them and that actually fits into their life. This does not mean that it's automatically easy to do workouts and to carve the time for them in the day. After all, behaviors do take time to develop into actual habits, but starting here, where it's most practical, is the best advice that I've come up with after all these years.

(3:54 - 4:26)
All of this being said, I have coached hundreds of athletes over my 10-plus year career as an endurance coach. Over that time, I have observed an interesting pattern. The athletes who I coach who plan to do their workouts at the start of their day, aka before work, before their other commitments in the day begin, and who do actually complete their workouts at the start of their day, there's an important difference between thinking or planning and actually doing, complete a higher percentage of the workouts that are planned on their training schedule than the athletes who plan to do the workouts later in the day.

(4:26 - 4:57)
Taking that one step further, I have observed that those athletes also tend to have better performance outcomes and end results from their training. This is all less about the actual time of day that these athletes are doing their workouts and much more about the fact that they are being consistent and putting in the work a higher percentage of the time. Basically, their consistency habit snowballs, they adapt to training better, they get stronger, which encourages and motivates them to keep the habit going, and they are able to reap the reward of their hard work when race day comes.

(4:57 - 5:22)
So why are start-of-day workouts so impactful? I think that this happens for a few reasons. First and foremost, athletes who plan to complete workouts at the start of their day are giving their workouts first fruits in terms of their time, mental energy, and physical energy, not their what's left. These athletes are intentionally carving time in the day and they are prioritizing their workouts above other things that they could be doing in a given day.

(5:22 - 5:35)
Remember, there are an infinite number of things you could possibly be doing in a given day. You need to choose what you are going to spend your limited and finite time on. Time is a finite resource.

(5:35 - 5:53)
How you spend your time is, in fact, how you are spending your life. My humble opinion is that we should intentionally prioritize how we are spending our time. If we don't prioritize it, and if we play a passive role in our own life, to quote Kate Winslet in The Holiday, You're supposed to be the leading lady of your own life, for God's sake.

(5:54 - 6:12)
The time will pass by and we may find that we spent our time on something that didn't actually matter that much to us. Secondly, things rarely go exactly the way we want or expect. This is true on a macro level, aka over the course of a year, and on a micro level, aka over the course of a week or even a single day.

(6:12 - 6:24)
We can have the best of intentions. But if, really, when, unexpected things happen over the course of a day that will snowball and impact the rest of the day and what we are able to do later in the day. So perhaps your car breaks down.

(6:24 - 6:30)
You end up having to stay later at work than you planned or you were scheduled to. Your kid gets sick. A friend calls you and asks you to pick them up.

(6:31 - 6:45)
You feel tired after the cumulative effects of what happened in your day. You don't feel motivated to do the workout or something else happens that you didn't anticipate. No matter the exact unexpected happening, workouts often become the first casualty when unexpected happenings occur.

(6:45 - 7:00)
Finally, some athletes who plan to complete workouts later in the day are procrastinators by nature. This is not true for all athletes who plan to complete workouts later in the day. Some athletes may have very real and legitimate scheduling and life reasons for planning to complete workouts later in the day.

(7:00 - 7:32)
But my experience has shown me that a decent percentage of athletes who plan to complete workouts later in the day are procrastinators, aka people whose busiest day of the week is always tomorrow. As anyone who is or loves a procrastinator knows, procrastinators often have the very best of intentions, but they sometimes overload themselves and fall short on completing everything that they want to do well, and that includes workouts. Furthermore, procrastination depletes willpower, which has obvious impacts for athletes who are procrastinators who want to get their workouts done.

(7:32 - 7:55)
All of this being said, after so many years of working with so many individual athletes, I've come to believe that both things I've outlined are true. Number one, that the best time of day to plan to complete workouts is the time of day that is most practical for an individual athlete. Number two, that athletes are more consistent and more successful overall when they plan to, and do, complete workouts at the start of their day.

(7:55 - 8:08)
As I've talked about before, I believe that the ability to simultaneously hold two seemingly conflicting ideas as true is a sign of maturity. It's not either or. Both of these things, that might appear to be in conflict with each other, can be true.

(8:08 - 8:41)
Perhaps it's a paradox, but in my experience, these two things are true. Athletes who want to plan to complete workouts at the end of their day and who want to consistently complete a high percentage of the workouts that are planned in their schedule need to be very organized and very disciplined in terms of their ability to stick to a self-imposed schedule in order for this plan to work. That being said, even the most organized and the most disciplined athletes will always have days when things do not go as planned and their workouts will be the thing that gets sacrificed when that happens.

(8:41 - 9:25)
As a result, even organized and disciplined athletes who plan to complete workouts at the end of their day do not complete the same percentage of workouts overall as athletes who complete workouts at the start of their day. If you recognize that you struggle with consistently getting workouts completed, that you are not organized, that you struggle with adhering to a self-imposed schedule, and or that you it might be worth considering re-evaluating what time of day will really work best for you to complete workouts. Could you benefit from planning to do and then actually doing your workouts before the main commitments of any given day begin? What things need to be true for this to happen in your life? What changes might you be able to make to carve the space for your workouts? My observations are not just of the athletes who I coach.

(9:25 - 9:55)
While I am a night owl by nature, a description that my five-year-old cousin Everly is fascinated with and adores, and staying up late comes much easier to me than getting up early, I've personally come to see the tremendous value in getting workouts completed at the start of my day. Not only does it ensure that something I care about, workouts and training, is actually getting done, but it starts my day on such a positive note. Yes, this can be attributed to the chemical changes that happen in my body after a workout, most notably the surge of positive mood-boosting endorphins.

(9:55 - 10:18)
But there's also a sense of accomplishment, peace, and contentment that comes over me. And this impacts the rest of my day, and therefore all of the people I interact with for the rest of my day, in a positive manner as well. Not only do I benefit athletically from this and from the consistency I am able to maintain over time, but I've noticed that the quality of my work is higher, my interactions with people I care about are better, and I am calmer and more level-headed.

(10:18 - 10:51)
There are so many positive benefits to this choice, both short and long-term. The debate will likely go on forever among coaches and athletes alike about whether start-of-day or end-of-day workouts are actually best. That being said, my experience has shown me that there's a lot of value in developing a schedule that is most practical for a given athlete, which encourages more consistency with workout adherence and completion over time, and to considering scheduling workouts at the start of one's day, which allows an athlete to get their workouts completed before other things have a chance to disrupt their day and their ability to do those workouts.

(10:51 - 11:14)
If you've struggled with consistency in completing your workouts, I'd encourage you to consider re-evaluating your approach to scheduling workouts in your daily life. Are there changes that you can make that will enable you to be more consistent? Perhaps a shift to a different time in your day is just the change you need in order to accelerate your path towards achieving your goals. That was another episode of the Full Circle Podcast.

(11:14 - 11:31)
Subscribe to the Full Circle Podcast wherever you listen to your favorite podcasts. If you like what you listen to, please be sure to leave us a rating and review as this goes a long way in helping us reach others. The thoughts and opinions expressed on the Full Circle Podcast are those of any individual.

(11:31 - 11:54)
As always, we'd love to hear from you and we value your feedback. Please send us an email at podcast at fullcircleendurance.com or visit us at fullcircleendurance.com backslash podcast. To find training plans, see what other coaching services we offer, or to join our community, please visit fullcircleendurance.com. I'm Coach Laura Henry. 

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