In a world of misinformation, Fitness Pudding is here to separate fact from fallacy, and science from fiction.
"Which is better, exercising in the morning or the evening?"
My common response to this question has always been, "Whenever you will do it," because the first step to seeing positive results of exercise - whether in the morning or evening - is actually exercising.
I have also noticed that exercising in the morning, for many, looks great 'on paper'. I will get up early, get my workout finished, shower, get ready for work, and enjoy the reminder for the rest of the day that I have already exercised.
Maybe this plan works well for the "morning person". For everyone else, however, when the early morning alarm clock (or phone) sings its hated tune, exercising does not sound as appealing. Yet, many love exercising in the evenings, perhaps for this exact reason.
So, what if people exercised according to their diurnal preference (morningness or eveningness)? A recent study examined this exact question.1
121 university faculty and students completed a measure of morningness-eveningness, with a lower score representing extreme eveningness and a higher score representing extreme morningness.
I have included this scale at the end, if you want to find out your own diurnal preference.
They were then given a FitBit to track their exercise over the next 4 weeks, and found...
"An earlier (as compared to later) time-of-exercise increased exercise frequency for more morning-oriented individuals while decreasing exercise frequency for evening-oriented individuals. Notably, all diurnal preferences exercised with similar frequency when time-of-exercise was later in the day."
In short, morning people exercised more often (frequently) when they exercised in the mornings, and less often when they exercised in the evenings. Evening people exercised less often with morning times of exercise.
However, everyone exercised at a similar frequency when the time of exercise was later in the day.
The findings from this study provide initial support for the hypothesis that people will exercise more often if they match their time of exercise to their diurnal preference for morningness (larks), eveningness (owls), or somewhere in between (hummingbirds).
If you want to try it for yourself:
1. Use the following scale to determine your dirunal preference. Answer all the questions, and sum your score - which will range from 13 to 55.2
If your score is low (13 - 27), you have an diurnal preference for EVENINGNESS. |
If you score is high (41-55), you might have a diurnal preference for MORNINGNESS. |
If you score somewhere in the middle (28-40), you might not have a preference for either. |
2. Match your exercise time to your preference.
From Smith et al., 1989
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Hisler, G. C., Phillips, A. L., & Krizan, Z. (2016). Individual Differences in Diurnal Preference and Time-of-Exercise Interact to Predict Exercise Frequency. Annals of Behavioral Medicine, 1-11.
Smith, C. S., Reilly, C., & Midkiff, K. (1989). Evaluation of three circadian rhythm questionnaires with suggestions for an improved measure of morningness. Journal of Applied psychology, 74(5), 728-738.
Dr. Faries has a Ph.D. in Behavioral Medicine and a Master of Science in Exercise Physiology, balanced with experience across the fitness industry, medicine, public health, research and extension.
His research explores why and how people initiate and maintain healthy behaviors, with focus on self-regulation success and failure. In other words, he seeks to better understand the common struggle with adopting healthy lifestyles, clarifying the reasons why we don’t “just do it.” Dr. Faries also holds unique expertise in medication adherence, when lifestyle is the medicine.
Dr. Faries also trains the next generation of ‘myth busters’ through medical and public health education, including his popular course, MythBusters: Health Edition.
Dr. Faries has served on the Board of Directors of the American College of Lifestyle Medicine, is founder of Lone Star Lifestyle Medicine for Texas, and is founder of FitnessPudding.com – a non-profit site dedicated to debunking common health and fitness myths.