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Should I Work Out on My Period?

Last updated: March 21, 2026

TLDR

Yes, you can and generally should move during your period. Light to moderate exercise often reduces cramps and improves mood. You do not need to push hard -- and you do not need to rest completely.

DEFINITION

Menstrual Phase
The first phase of the cycle, roughly days 1-5, when the uterine lining is shed. Both estrogen and progesterone are at their lowest.

Should You Work Out on Your Period? Yes — With Some Adjustments

The all-or-nothing framing around period workouts is unhelpful. You do not need to push through a hard session to prove something. And you do not need to skip the gym entirely because you are menstruating.

The answer for most women is somewhere in the middle: move, but adjust to how you feel.

The Case for Moving

Exercise during menstruation has a few well-established benefits:

Cramp relief. Physical activity increases blood flow and can reduce the cramping effect of prostaglandins. Many women find a 20-30 minute walk more effective for cramps than lying still.

Mood improvement. Estrogen and progesterone are both low during menstruation, which can affect mood. Exercise-related endorphins help counteract this.

Habit maintenance. Skipping completely for 5+ days every month adds up. Consistent light movement keeps your routine intact without requiring full-intensity sessions.

What to Do

Day 1-2 (heavy symptoms): Walking, gentle yoga, or stretching. Duration 20-40 minutes.

Day 3-5 (symptoms often reducing): Light strength training, moderate cardio, Pilates. Resume closer to your normal routine.

When to Actually Rest

  • Severe pain that is not normal for you (this warrants a doctor visit, not just a rest day)
  • Significant illness alongside menstruation
  • Genuine exhaustion — not just mild tiredness

What Ondara Does Not Do

Ondara does not tell you that skipping a workout on day 1 of your period breaks your streak. It does not send notifications guilting you for a lighter week. We built the no-broken-streaks philosophy into the core of the app because we know cycle-aware fitness means some weeks look different — and that is exactly right.

Q&A

Should I work out when I have my period?

For most women, yes. Light to moderate exercise -- walking, yoga, easy strength training -- is safe and often helps with cramps and mood. Only avoid training if you have significant pain, heavy bleeding requiring medical attention, or feel genuinely unwell.

Q&A

What if I feel too tired to work out on my period?

A 15-20 minute walk still counts. You do not need a full session to maintain your habit. On days when symptoms are significant, scaling back to gentle movement is the right call -- not skipping and feeling guilty about it.

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

Is it bad to exercise with cramps?
No. Light exercise can actually reduce cramping by increasing circulation and reducing prostaglandin effects. If cramps are severe, yoga and walking tend to be more comfortable than high-impact movement.
Will working out make my period heavier?
Exercise does not increase menstrual flow. It is safe to train at any flow level.
What if I am an athlete and my period falls on a competition day?
Many competitive athletes train and compete during menstruation without significant performance effects. Perceived effort may be slightly higher, particularly on days 1-2. Some athletes report no difference at all.

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