Regular exercisers can also combine cardio and strength training, especially if you’re struggling to make time for exercising and can’t schedule in several workouts per week.
How much cardio and strength training should I do a week?
The CDC’s current guidelines for fitness is at 150 minutes of moderate to high-intense aerobic exercise or cardio a week, balanced with “two days” of strength training.
How many times a week you do cardio and strength training workouts?
If you really want to see results reflected on the scale and continue to make progress over time, you need to commit to working out at least four to five days per week. But remember, you’ll build up to this. To start, you might only want to do two or three days per week and slowly work your way up to five days.
What order should I do cardio and strength?
If your goal is better endurance, do cardio first. If your goal is burning fat and losing weight, do strength training first. If you want to get stronger, do strength training first. On upper-body strength training days, you can do either first.



