The Caloric Deficit Hierarchy
1. Nutrition (70-80%) → 2. Strength Training → 3. NEAT (Daily Movement) → 4. Cardio
Cardio is last in priority. It amplifies a good diet; it can't fix a bad one.
What Cardio DOES
- Burns additional calories
- Improves cardiovascular health
- Enhances insulin sensitivity
- Supports recovery (low intensity)
- Reduces stress (when appropriate)
- Allows for slightly more food intake
What Cardio DOESN'T Do
- Out-train a bad diet
- Target specific fat areas
- Build significant muscle
- "Tone" your body (that's muscle + fat loss)
- Compensate for excessive calories
- Work magic without a deficit
The Math Reality Check
Consider this: 30 minutes of moderate jogging burns approximately 250-350 calories. That's about one large cookie or a small bagel with cream cheese. You can eat those 300 calories in 2 minutes but need 30+ minutes to burn them off. This is why diet must come first.
LISS vs HIIT: Which Burns More Fat?
The two most popular cardio approaches both work for fat loss, but have different pros and cons.
LISS (Low-Intensity Steady State)
60-70% max HR | 30-60 min
- Easier recovery—can do 5-7x/week
- Preserves muscle better
- Lower injury risk
- Time-consuming (30-60 min)
- Lower calorie burn per minute
HIIT (High-Intensity Intervals)
85-95% max HR | 10-20 min (compare methods)
- Time-efficient (10-20 min)
- EPOC effect (afterburn)
- Improves VO2 max
- High recovery demands
- Can impair strength gains
- Only 2-3x/week max
MISS: The Middle Ground
Moderate-Intensity Steady State (MISS) sits between LISS and HIIT. Think jogging, moderate cycling, or rowing at 65-75% max heart rate. Breathing is elevated but controlled.
| Factor | LISS | MISS | HIIT |
|---|---|---|---|
| Calories/30min | 100-150 | 200-300 | 250-400 |
| Recovery Demand | Very Low | Moderate | High |
| Muscle Impact | Minimal | Some | Moderate |
| Can Do Daily | Yes | 3-4x/week | 2-3x/week max |
| Time Efficient | No | Moderate | Yes |
| Sustainability | High | Moderate | Lower |
The Verdict
For pure fat loss in a calorie deficit, total calorie burn matters most. HIIT burns more per minute, but LISS can be done more frequently with less recovery cost. Choose based on your schedule, recovery capacity, and training goals.
Optimal Cardio Frequency & Duration
How much cardio you need depends on your calorie deficit, training intensity, and muscle preservation goals. Track your fat loss progress with the Body Fat Calculator — a more accurate measure than the scale alone.
Muscle Gain Phase
0-2 sessions/week
20-30 min LISS
Purpose: Cardiovascular health, not fat loss
Moderate Fat Loss
3-5 sessions/week
30-45 min LISS or 15-20 min HIIT
Split: 3x LISS + 1-2x HIIT
Aggressive Fat Loss
5-7 sessions/week
45-60 min LISS (limit HIIT to 1-2x)
Prioritize LISS to preserve strength
Best for: Getting visible abs
Critical Rule
Cardio should never compromise your strength training performance. If you're too fatigued to lift heavy or progress, reduce cardio volume before cutting calories further.
The Cardio Trap
Starting with excessive cardio leaves you nowhere to go when fat loss stalls. If you're already doing 6 hours of cardio weekly at the start, what do you add when you plateau? Start low, progress slowly, save tools for when you need them.
Fasted Cardio: Does It Burn More Fat?
Fasted cardio (before eating) is often promoted for "enhanced fat burning." But does science support this?
Key Study: Schoenfeld et al. (2014)
Compared fasted vs fed cardio in women on a calorie-restricted diet over 4 weeks.
Result: No significant difference in fat loss between groups.
Why? While fasted cardio burns more fat during the session, your body compensates by burning less fat after. Over 24 hours, total fat oxidation is the same.
When Fasted Cardio Makes Sense
- You prefer training fasted
- It fits your schedule better
- You want larger meals later
When Fed Cardio Makes Sense
- High-intensity work (HIIT)
- Long-duration sessions
- You need better performance
Bottom Line
Fasted vs fed cardio makes essentially zero difference for fat loss. Choose based on personal preference, schedule, and performance. What matters is total daily calorie deficit.
How to Avoid Muscle Loss from Cardio
Excessive cardio can lead to muscle loss through the interference effect—where endurance training suppresses muscle-building pathways.
Prioritize LISS Over HIIT
Low-intensity cardio (60-70% max HR) causes minimal interference. Limit true HIIT to 1-2 sessions per week during fat loss.
Separate Cardio and Lifting by 6+ Hours
Do cardio after lifting or on separate days. Best: lift in morning, LISS in evening.
Keep Protein High (1.8-2.2g/kg)
Adequate protein is the #1 defense against muscle loss in a deficit. Increase to 2.2g/kg during aggressive cuts.
Maintain Training Intensity
Keep lifting heavy (75-85% 1RM) to signal muscle preservation. You can reduce volume, but maintain intensity.
Monitor Recovery Markers
Watch for: strength decreases, persistent fatigue, elevated resting HR, poor sleep. If present, reduce cardio by 20-30%.
Best Cardio Methods for Fat Loss
The "best" cardio is the one you'll actually do consistently. Here's how they compare:
Walking (Incline)
200-300 cal/hr | Very Low Impact
Best for: Beginners, daily activity, joint issues
Pro tip: Incline at 3-4 mph burns significantly more
Cycling
300-700 cal/hr | Low Impact
Best for: Knee/hip issues, HIIT or LISS
Assault bike provides full-body engagement
Jogging/Running
400-600 cal/hr | High Impact
Best for: Good cardio base, healthy joints
Caution: Overuse injuries if volume increases fast
Rowing
500-800 cal/hr | Moderate Impact
Best for: Full-body cardio, back/leg endurance
Requires proper technique for safety
Swimming
400-700 cal/hr | Zero Impact
Best for: Injury recovery, full-body work
Calorie burn depends on stroke technique
HIIT Sprints
300-500 cal/session (inc. EPOC)
Best for: Time-efficient, VO2 max improvement
Protocol: 30s sprint / 90s rest x 8-10 rounds
Muscle Preservation by Cardio Type
| Type | Muscle Impact | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Walking | Minimal | Low intensity, no eccentric stress |
| Cycling | Low | Concentric only, low joint stress |
| Swimming | Low | Zero impact, full body |
| Rowing | Moderate | Some resistance component |
| Stair Climber | Moderate | Leg engagement, low impact |
| Running | Higher | High impact, eccentric stress |
Common Cardio Mistakes for Fat Loss
Mistake: Starting with Maximum Cardio
Leaves no room to progress when fat loss stalls.
Solution: Start Minimal, Add Gradually
Begin with 2-3 sessions/week. Add more only when needed.
Mistake: Eating Back All Cardio Calories
Calorie trackers overestimate burn. Eating it all back erases the deficit.
Solution: Don't Rely on Cardio for Deficit
View cardio as bonus burn. Keep food intake based on target calories, not "earned" from exercise.
Mistake: Prioritizing Cardio Over Strength
Hours on the treadmill, skipping weights. Leads to muscle loss.
Solution: Strength Training is Non-Negotiable
3-4 resistance sessions weekly minimum. Cardio is supplemental.
Mistake: Same Cardio Forever
Body adapts, efficiency increases, calorie burn decreases.
Solution: Vary Type and Intensity
Mix LISS, MISS, and HIIT. Change modalities occasionally.
Sample Weekly Schedule
Moderate Fat Loss Schedule
- Monday: Upper Body Strength + 30 min LISS (evening)
- Tuesday: Lower Body Strength
- Wednesday: 45 min LISS (cycling or incline walk)
- Thursday: Upper Body Hypertrophy + 15 min HIIT
- Friday: Lower Body Hypertrophy
- Saturday: 60 min LISS (outdoor activity)
- Sunday: Rest or 30 min easy walk
Total weekly cardio: 3-4 hours (mostly LISS)
Progression Strategy
Increase cardio gradually only when fat loss stalls:
- Phase 1 (Weeks 1-4): 3x/week, 30 min LISS
- Phase 2 (Weeks 5-8): 4x/week, 40 min LISS
- Phase 3 (Weeks 9-12): 5x/week, 45-60 min LISS
Important: Only increase if stalled for 2+ weeks. Save cardio as a tool to break plateaus.