Workout Plans

The Office Worker Workout — 15 Minutes to Undo 8 Hours

A short daily routine to counter desk posture, dormant glutes, and the tight hips that come with British office life.

Marcus Lee
Marcus is a senior fitness writer…
Published 24 March 2026 Updated 24 April 2026 ⏱ 2 min read
The Office Worker Workout — 15 Minutes to Undo 8 Hours

Sitting for eight hours a day is the default British working life — train, desk, train, sofa. Your hip flexors shorten, your glutes switch off, your upper back rounds, and by Friday evening everything aches for reasons you cannot quite place. This 15-minute routine is not a workout in the traditional sense. It is a daily reset.

Key Takeaways

  • – Fifteen minutes, no equipment, no sweating required
  • – Targets the specific weaknesses of desk workers
  • – Can be done in work clothes, in a spare meeting room
  • – Best used daily, even on gym days
  • – Pairs well with any strength programme

What eight hours of sitting actually does

Three things go wrong in order of severity:

  1. Hip flexors shorten — they are held in a bent position all day
  2. Glutes switch off — they literally forget how to fire properly
  3. Upper back rounds — shoulders creep forward, neck pokes out

None of this is catastrophic, but it compounds year on year if nothing counters it. Fifteen minutes a day is genuinely enough.

The routine

Do one round of the following. Slow, controlled, no rushing.

  1. Cat-cow — 8 slow reps
  2. Thoracic rotation on all fours — 6 reps per side
  3. Hip flexor stretch (half kneeling) — 45 seconds per side
  4. Glute bridge — 15 reps, two-second squeeze at the top
  5. Dead bug — 8 reps per side
  6. Side plank — 30 seconds per side
  7. Wall angel — 10 slow reps
  8. Bodyweight squat — 15 reps, sit in the bottom of the last one for 10 seconds
Pro Tip

Do this before dinner, not first thing. Your spine is dehydrated in the morning — mobility work feels dramatically better by mid-afternoon.

When to do it

Daily, ideally. But realistic daily beats optimistic never. Three good options:

  • Straight after work, before you sit down on the sofa
  • In a spare meeting room at lunch
  • Before your main training session as a warm-up

Does this replace proper training?

No, and it is not trying to. Think of this as the maintenance layer underneath whatever strength work you do — whether that is our 3-day full-body plan or the home bodyweight session. It keeps you healthy enough to keep training hard.

Other desk-worker habits that compound

  • Stand up every 45 minutes — even just to fill the kettle
  • Walk at lunch — aim for 15 minutes outdoors
  • Sleep properly — see our sleep and recovery guide
  • Set your monitor at eye level, not laptop-on-desk level

None of it is dramatic. All of it adds up.