Weight Loss

How Much Cardio Do You Actually Need for Fat Loss?

Less than the fitness industry tells you. Here is the honest UK-friendly answer, with diminishing returns explained.

Marcus Lee
Marcus is a senior fitness writer…
Published 9 April 2026 Updated 24 April 2026 ⏱ 3 min read
How Much Cardio Do You Actually Need for Fat Loss?

If you are doing five cardio sessions a week and the scale still will not budge, this article is for you. The honest answer most fitness content avoids is that cardio is the smallest lever in fat loss, not the biggest. Here is how much you actually need, and what to do with the time you save.

Key Takeaways

  • – Diet creates the deficit, cardio contributes around 10 to 20 percent
  • – 150 minutes per week of moderate cardio covers most people
  • – Returns diminish sharply past 300 minutes per week
  • – Walking counts, and counts well
  • – Strength training is a better use of a fourth weekly session

The 80/20 of fat loss

Fat loss is overwhelmingly driven by the calories you eat, not the calories you burn. A single medium Tesco meal deal sits around 600 kcal. A 40-minute run burns about 400 kcal. You cannot outrun a kitchen. Our macro calculator sorts the eating side out in an afternoon.

The NHS guideline is a sensible floor

The NHS recommends 150 minutes of moderate-intensity activity per week. That is your floor, not your ceiling. For fat loss, it is also a very sensible target.

In practical terms:

  • Five 30-minute brisk walks after work or lunch
  • Three 50-minute cycles at weekends and one weekday
  • Two gym cardio sessions of 45 minutes plus a long Sunday walk

Any of those combinations hits the target.

Diminishing returns past 300 minutes

More cardio is not linearly better. Past roughly 300 minutes a week, three things happen:

  1. Appetite increases, often quietly wiping out the extra burn
  2. Recovery suffers, which hurts your strength sessions
  3. Injury risk climbs sharply, especially for runners

Elite endurance athletes do more because their job is endurance. Yours is fat loss.

Pro Tip

Walking counts. A brisk 30-minute walk at 5.5km/h hits the NHS moderate-intensity threshold for most adults.

A practical UK weekly plan

Here is a realistic British week that works:

  • Mon: 30-min brisk walk at lunch
  • Tue: Strength session (45 min)
  • Wed: 30-min brisk walk
  • Thu: Strength session
  • Fri: Rest or gentle walk
  • Sat: 60-minute cycle or walk with a coffee stop
  • Sun: 30-min walk

Total moderate cardio: 180 minutes. Plus two strength sessions. Plus a rest day. This is enough for almost anyone who is not competing.

Why strength beats extra cardio

If you have capacity for a fourth non-walking session, make it strength, not cardio. Muscle protects you from regaining fat later, improves insulin sensitivity and reshapes how you look far more than another 5K. See our piece on cardio vs weights for the full case, or start with our beginners strength training guide.

The punchline: stop chasing more cardio. Hit 150 to 200 minutes, nail your diet, lift twice a week, sleep properly. That is the whole job.