The Best Way to Exercise on a GLP-1
On a GLP-1, exercise is less about burning extra calories and more about protecting the muscle and energy that make your results last. Here is what actually matters, and how to do it on a smaller appetite.
The short answer
The medication handles your appetite, so the job of exercise shifts. Instead of trying to burn off food, the goal is to protect the muscle that fast weight loss can cost and to keep your energy and strength up. That makes resistance training the priority, with everyday movement and some cardio around it. You do not need to punish yourself, you need to be consistent and fuel it well.
Why strength training comes first
Any weight loss can take some muscle along with fat, and muscle is what keeps your metabolism up and your results durable. Resistance training, lifting, bands, or body-weight work, is the single most effective signal to tell your body to keep that muscle. Two to three short sessions a week is enough for most people. If you do one thing, do this.
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Start the 30-day trialFueling workouts on a smaller appetite
Because a GLP-1 reduces how much you want to eat, the challenge is getting enough fuel, especially protein, to support training. A little protein and some carbohydrate before or after a workout helps you perform and recover. This is the opposite of the usual dieting worry, here, eating too little around exercise is the more common mistake.
What about cardio and steps?
Cardio and daily steps are genuinely good for your heart, mood, sleep, and overall health, and walking is one of the easiest habits to keep. They are a valuable complement to strength training, not a replacement for it. A simple, sustainable combination is a couple of strength sessions plus a daily walk.
How to start, at any level
- Start where you are. Body-weight squats, wall push-ups, and a daily walk count. Progress slowly.
- Prioritize protein, especially around training, to protect muscle and recovery.
- Hydrate and mind electrolytes, since lower intake can leave you low on both.
- Do not overdo it early. Energy can dip in the first weeks, build gradually rather than burning out.
- Be consistent over intense. Two reliable sessions a week beat an occasional brutal one.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need to exercise on a GLP-1?
You will likely lose weight without it because the medication reduces appetite, but exercise is strongly worth it. On a GLP-1 the goal of exercise is less about burning calories and more about protecting the muscle that fast weight loss can cost, which keeps your metabolism up and your results durable. Resistance training a couple of times a week is the most valuable thing you can do.
What is the best exercise on a GLP-1?
Resistance training, whether lifting, bands, or body-weight work, is the priority because it protects muscle during weight loss. Two to three short sessions a week is enough for most people. Add a daily walk and some cardio for heart and overall health. The combination of strength work plus everyday movement protects your results better than cardio alone.
How do I have energy to work out on a GLP-1?
Because a GLP-1 reduces appetite, the common mistake is eating too little to fuel training. A little protein and some carbohydrate before or after a workout helps you perform and recover, and staying hydrated with attention to electrolytes matters too. If energy is low, especially early on, build gradually and make sure you are eating enough, which is something a supervised plan helps you do.
Will exercise help me lose more weight on a GLP-1?
It can add to your results, but its biggest value is protecting muscle and supporting energy, mood, and long-term maintenance rather than dramatically increasing the number on the scale. The medication does most of the appetite work, exercise protects the quality of your loss. That is why strength training, not endless cardio, is the priority.
Can I lift weights while losing weight on a GLP-1?
Yes, and you should if you can. Lifting or resistance training is the most effective way to keep muscle during weight loss, which protects your metabolism and your results. You do not need a gym, body-weight exercises and bands at home work well. Pair it with enough protein, and start at a level that matches your current fitness.
This article is informational only and not medical advice. Speak with a licensed physician before starting or changing any GLP-1 therapy. Individual results vary. New Hope Weight Loss is a physician-supervised medical weight loss clinic in Costa Mesa, CA. Eligibility for treatment is determined during the medical consultation. Compounded semaglutide and compounded tirzepatide are not the same products as Wegovy®, Ozempic®, Mounjaro®, or Zepbound®.