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Not Seeing Results? Your Workout Schedule Might Be The Problem

Author:
April 16, 2026

Assistant Health Editor
Assistant Health Editor
Ava Durgin is the former Assistant Health Editor at mindbodygreen. She holds a B.A. in Global Health and Psychology from Duke University.

Image by Kristin McGee
April 16, 2026
You can the same workout plan as someone else, show up just as often, and still get very different results. It’s easy to blame intensity, discipline, or even genetics. But there’s another variable most people don’t think to question…
When you’re exercising.
Plenty of people force early workouts because it “gets it done.” Others push everything to the evening. Both can work. But if you’ve ever felt your workouts don’t quite click, or your energy feels mismatched to the effort, there’s a chance it’s not the workout that’s off. It’s the timing.
A new study adds weight to that idea, suggesting your internal clock may be shaping how much benefit you actually get from exercise.
Exercise timing & your internal clock
Does exercise work better when it lines up with your natural rhythm? This was the question the researchers set out to answer.
They recruited 150 adults between 40 and 60, all with at least one cardiovascular risk factor such as high blood pressure, excess weight, or a sedentary lifestyle. Before anything else, they determined each participant’s chronotype, essentially whether they were biologically wired to function better in the morning or evening. This wasn’t guesswork. It combined a standardized questionnaire with 48 hours of core body temperature tracking, a reliable marker of circadian rhythm.
From there, participants were split into two groups. One exercised at times that matched their chronotype. Morning types trained in the morning, evening types in the evening. The other group did the opposite, working out at times misaligned with their natural energy patterns.
Everyone ed the same program: five supervised sessions per week, 40 minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic exercise, for 12 weeks.
Researchers measured a wide range of outcomes before and after the intervention, including blood pressure, heart rate variability, VO2 max, fasting glucose, LDL cholesterol, and sleep quality.
Aligning exercise timing led to stronger cardiovascular gains
Both groups improved. That part isn’t surprising. Regular exercise is beneficial, regardless of timing. But what stood out was how much more the aligned group improved.
Participants who exercised in sync with their chronotype saw nearly double the reduction in systolic blood pressure compared to those who didn’t. The difference was even more pronounced in people who started with hypertension. Their blood pressure dropped significantly more when workouts matched their internal clock.
The same pattern showed up across other markers. Chronotype-aligned exercise led to greater improvements in aerobic fitness, better fasting glucose control, lower LDL cholesterol, and noticeably better sleep quality.
And the sleep piece is easy to overlook, but it changes the whole picture. Sleep isn’t just where your body recovers from a workout. It’s when a lot of those benefits actually get built in. When sleep improves alongside cardiovascular and metabolic health, you’re looking at a compounding effect, not just a single win.
Why timing might matter more than we thought
So why would timing make that much of a difference?
Your circadian rhythm influences everything from hormone release to body temperature to how efficiently your muscles use energy. When you exercise in sync with that rhythm, your body may be primed to respond more effectively.
There’s also a behavioral layer. People tend to stick with routines that feel natural. If you’re a night owl dragging yourself into a 6 a.m. workout, it’s going to feel a constant push. Maybe you can power through for a while, but it rarely feels easy or sustainable.
This is where it gets more personal than prescriptive. It’s not about morning workouts being “better” or evening workouts being “worse.” It’s about figuring out when you tend to feel most awake, focused, and physically capable, and building around that.
How to figure out your chronotype
If you’re not sure what your natural rhythm looks , there are a few easy ways to get a sense of it. Online chronotype quizzes based on the Morningness-Eveningness framework can give you a quick read. Wearables Whoop, Apple Watch, and Oura Ring also track sleep and recovery patterns that can hint at your natural rhythm over time.
From there, you don’t need to change your entire routine. Even shifting your workouts a little closer to when you naturally have more energy can make a difference.
If you’re a morning type, leaning into earlier sessions may help you get more out of the same effort. If you’re a night owl and feel most alert later in the day, giving yourself permission to train in the evening might actually support better results, not sabotage them.
The takeaway
We tend to think of exercise in terms of frequency, intensity, and duration. And now, with social media, it’s easier than ever to compare your routine to someone else’s and assume their schedule is the one to .
But this research is a good reminder that your body doesn’t operate on someone else’s clock. You can copy the exact workout, the same number of sessions, even the same intensity, and still get a different result if the timing doesn’t line up with how your body naturally functions.
There’s a level of bioindividuality here that’s easy to miss. Your energy, your hormones, your performance windows—they’re all running on their own rhythm. When you work with that instead of trying to override it, things tend to feel better and work better.
So instead of asking “What’s the best time to work out?” it might be more useful to ask, “When do I actually feel my best doing this?” That shift alone can change how consistent you are and the results you get out of the effort you’re already putting in.
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