Skip to main content

Best Workouts for the Follicular Phase

Last updated: March 21, 2026

TLDR

The follicular phase (days 1-13) is when estrogen climbs and energy is highest. Heavy lifting, HIIT, and skill-based training all produce strong results in this window.

DEFINITION

Follicular Phase
Days 1-13 of the menstrual cycle (approximately). Estrogen rises steadily from low (during menstruation) to high (just before ovulation). Energy, strength, and recovery tend to improve across this phase.

Follicular Phase: Your Training Opportunity Window

The follicular phase is the upswing portion of your cycle. Estrogen starts low (during menstruation) and builds steadily toward its peak just before ovulation. Energy levels, pain tolerance, and muscle recovery all improve as estrogen climbs.

This makes the follicular phase the best time to challenge yourself, try harder workouts, and schedule the sessions you have been building toward.

Best Workout Types

Heavy Compound Strength Training

Squats, deadlifts, bench press, overhead press, and rows all benefit from elevated estrogen. Program heavier loads (80-90% of 1RM) and more sets than your luteal phase plan allows.

High-Intensity Interval Training

HIIT is well-suited to the follicular phase because your cardiovascular recovery is faster and your body handles heat better (progesterone, which raises core temperature, is low). Sprint intervals, kettlebell circuits, and metabolic conditioning work well.

New Skill Development

Learning a new lift, movement pattern, or sport skill is more effective when energy and focus are high. The follicular phase is a good window for technical work — Olympic lifts, gymnastics movements, new yoga poses.

Longer Cardio Sessions

Endurance runs, long bike rides, or extended swimming sessions align well with follicular-phase energy levels.

Follicular Phase Workout Principles

  • Push harder than your luteal phase baseline
  • Schedule your most demanding sessions in the late follicular window (days 10-13)
  • Maintain at least one rest day per week
  • Transition gradually into more moderate training as ovulation approaches and the luteal phase begins

Planning Ahead

The follicular phase works best when you plan for it. Knowing that days 8-13 are your high-performance window lets you schedule accordingly — instead of accidentally landing your hardest week during the luteal phase and wondering why everything feels awful.

Ondara makes this visible by mapping your cycle to your weekly training plan automatically.

Q&A

What workouts are best during the follicular phase?

Heavy compound lifts, high-intensity interval training, and skill-based training all align well with the follicular phase hormonal environment. Estrogen supports muscle repair and pain tolerance, making this the most productive window for challenging workouts.

Q&A

How often should I train in the follicular phase?

4-5 training days per week is sustainable for most women during the follicular phase. Your recovery is faster and energy is higher, so slightly more volume and frequency work well.

Want a workout plan built for this phase?

Ondara adapts to where you are in your cycle automatically. No guesswork. Start your free trial.

Train smarter with your cycle

Can I train every day in the follicular phase?
Daily training is possible if intensity is managed -- alternating hard and moderate days. Complete rest is still valuable, but you may find you need less of it than in the luteal phase.
Is the follicular phase good for cardio?
Yes. Both steady-state and high-intensity cardio work well. Your cardiovascular system handles heat better in the follicular phase because progesterone (which raises temperature) is low.
What if I do not notice a difference between cycle phases when I train?
Individual variation is real and significant. Some women notice clear phase differences in energy and strength. Others do not. If you do not notice a difference, you do not need to change anything -- cycle syncing is a tool, not a mandate.

Keep reading