The cortisol mechanism — why more cardio makes things worse

Every cardio session produces cortisol. This is normal and necessary — cortisol mobilises energy for the exercise, initiates recovery processes and signals the adaptation that makes you fitter. The problem is not cortisol from exercise. The problem is chronic cortisol from too much exercise applied at the wrong time in the cycle.

When cardio volume is high and the cycle phase is luteal — when cortisol sensitivity is already elevated — the cortisol response to the same exercise session is significantly larger than it would be in the follicular phase. The body interprets the combined signal of caloric restriction, high cortisol exercise and elevated luteal phase cortisol sensitivity as a state of chronic threat and responds predictably: muscle breakdown increases, fat storage increases (particularly abdominal), metabolic rate decreases and appetite increases.

The woman doing daily cardio to lose weight is, in the second fortnight of every month, producing exactly the hormonal conditions that oppose fat loss and promote fat storage. The cardio is not failing — the timing is wrong and the volume is excessive for the hormonal environment.

Why does cardio stop working for weight loss?
Chronic cardio elevates cortisol without the anabolic counterbalance of resistance training. Over time: muscle mass declines, metabolic rate falls, abdominal fat storage increases, appetite increases. The body adapts to match energy output with intake and the initial weight loss stalls. Adding more cardio compounds the cortisol problem rather than resolving it.

The muscle loss factor — why this is the real problem

Muscle mass is the primary driver of resting metabolic rate. Every kilogram of muscle burns approximately 12 to 15 calories per day at rest. Every kilogram of fat burns approximately 4 calories per day. The woman who loses muscle to do more cardio has permanently reduced her metabolic rate — making future fat loss harder, not easier.

Chronic cardio combined with caloric restriction is the most effective formula for muscle loss that women's fitness culture has ever produced. Cortisol from cardio promotes muscle protein breakdown. Caloric restriction reduces the amino acid availability needed for muscle protein synthesis. The result is a body that becomes progressively less metabolically active — burning fewer calories at rest — requiring more restriction and more cardio to maintain the same weight loss, in a cycle that becomes increasingly unsustainable.

Resistance training reverses this. Compound resistance training — squats, deadlifts, rows, presses — creates an anabolic signal that preserves and builds muscle. Combined with adequate protein, this protects metabolic rate and creates a body composition trajectory that is sustainable rather than self-defeating. Read the complete guide to cycle syncing your workouts.

Is cardio or weights better for fat loss in women?
Resistance training consistently produces better long-term body composition results. It builds and preserves muscle — the primary driver of metabolic rate. It improves insulin sensitivity. It does not chronically elevate cortisol. It creates a hormonal environment that supports fat loss while preserving metabolic rate. Cardio is valuable for cardiovascular health but as the primary fat loss tool is significantly outperformed by resistance training.
Does cardio increase cortisol in women?
Yes — particularly in the luteal phase when cortisol sensitivity is already elevated. The same cardio session produces a larger cortisol response in the premenstrual week than in the follicular phase. Women doing daily high-intensity cardio without cycle awareness repeatedly apply maximum cortisol stimulus to their most cortisol-sensitive phase — a consistent pathway to fat loss plateaus and body composition deterioration.

The alternative — what actually works

Replace chronic cardio with compound resistance training. Three sessions per week of squats, deadlifts, rows and presses builds the muscle that protects metabolic rate, improves insulin sensitivity and creates the body composition trajectory that cardio cannot.

Make cardio phase-specific. Higher-intensity cardio in the follicular and ovulatory phases when cortisol sensitivity is lowest. Moderate cardio — walking, cycling, swimming — in the luteal phase. None or minimal in the late luteal phase when cortisol sensitivity peaks. This maintains cardiovascular fitness without the chronic cortisol overload that opposes fat loss.

Protect the luteal phase. The week before your period is the worst time for high-intensity cardio. Cortisol sensitivity is highest. Recovery is slowest. The hormonal environment most opposes the goals the cardio is meant to serve. Reducing intensity in this window produces better fat loss over the month than maintaining it.

Eat enough to train. Caloric restriction combined with high cardio volume maximises cortisol and minimises muscle protein synthesis. Eating at maintenance or a moderate deficit — with adequate protein — in the follicular phase, and at maintenance in the luteal phase, produces better results than restricting throughout.

The complete training framework — compound resistance protocols, cardio guidelines by phase and the full nutrition system — is in The Women's Hormone Blueprint. The guide built specifically for the woman who trains consistently and is not seeing the results her effort deserves.

Why am I gaining weight from exercising too much?
Chronic overexercise elevates cortisol beyond recovery capacity. Chronically elevated cortisol promotes muscle breakdown, reduces sex hormones, promotes abdominal fat storage, increases appetite and impairs sleep. The paradoxical result of more exercise producing fat gain or stagnation is cortisol-driven and resolves when training volume is reduced and cycle-aware intensity management is applied.
What type of exercise is best for women's hormones?
Compound resistance training three times per week as the foundation. Supplemented with moderate-intensity cardio — walking, cycling — rather than chronic high-intensity cardio. Adjusted to hormonal phase — higher intensity follicular and ovulatory, lower intensity late luteal. This combination produces the best body composition and hormonal outcomes for women across all cycle phases.
About the author

Andreea Mighiu is a women's hormonal health educator and the founder of Zōē. She works alongside medical doctors to translate peer-reviewed research into clear, practical cycle education. She is an educator, not a physician — Zōē's content is designed to inform, not to replace personalised medical advice.

References

1. Effect of menstrual cycle on resting metabolism: systematic review and meta-analysis. PLOS One, 2020. journals.plos.org
2. Dietary energy intake across the menstrual cycle: a narrative review. 2023. pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

This article is educational and not a substitute for medical advice. Speak with a qualified clinician before making significant changes to diet, training, supplementation or medication.