You’ve probably heard this one on the gym floor: “Should I do intervals or just get on the treadmill and grind it out?” Behind that question is a real worry: Am I wasting my time if I don’t do HIIT?
On the surface, the headline is simple: Both HIIT and steady cardio improved body fat and fitness, and HIIT was slightly better for waist size, body fat percentage, and VO₂peak.
But once you look at who was studied and how tightly controlled the trials were, the story gets a lot more nuanced—especially for a real-world place like FITNESS SF.
This post is about that nuance.
Yes, the paper calls them “young and middle-aged adults,” but that doesn’t mean “random healthy gym-goers.”
Across the 29 trials:
In other words, this wasn’t a study of “fit 30-year-olds who already lift and go to yoga twice a week.”
It was mostly deconditioned adults, many with obesity and/or metabolic disease, who were new to structured exercise.
If you’re a FITNESS SF member who:
…then these studies are actually pretty relevant to you. If you’re already training hard 4–6 days per week, the findings are still interesting—but not a perfect mirror of your physiology.
This isn’t a “we just asked people what they do at the gym” situation. The researchers only included tightly controlled randomized controlled trials (RCTs) with specific rules.
To get into this meta-analysis, a study had to check all of these boxes:
The “HIIT” group had to be truly high intensity, not just “kind of hard”:
The comparison group had to be moderate steady-state cardio, not random activity:
To even qualify, a study had to report hard numbers on:
If a trial didn’t provide enough data to crunch the numbers, it was out.
So the bar to get into this analysis was high. That’s good for scientific clarity, but it also means we’re looking at a very specific slice of exercisers under tightly supervised conditions.
Let’s translate the core findings into “gym language.”
Across all 807 participants:
Compared to MICT, HIIT produced:
These differences were statistically significant, but small in absolute terms.
This is important:
HIIT was not a magic “melt all your fat” protocol. It was a bit more efficient, not a completely different universe of results.
And remember:
No protocol in this paper added meaningful muscle mass. That’s your reminder that strength training still matters if you care about metabolism, shape, and long-term function.
This is where I want our FITNESS SF community to really lean in.
The paper itself is very honest about its limitations—and they matter for you.
If you’re:
…then your response to HIIT or MICT may look different than what’s in this paper.
Translation: this supports the idea that cardio helps, but it does not show that a few months of intervals will “fix” obesity or metabolic disease by itself.
Most studies did not tightly control diet, or only gave general advice.
Given what we know about energy balance, that means:
For anyone chasing fat loss: cardio is a tool, but the steering wheel is still nutrition and lifestyle.
Because the studies were supervised:
In a real gym, without that level of monitoring, jumping straight from “mostly sedentary” to all-out HIIT can be:
That’s one reason having a personal trainer or at least a thoughtful starting plan matters.
Let’s put it all together.
Both HIIT and steady cardio work.
HIIT is a bit more time-efficient.
Slightly better improvement in waist size, body fat percentage, and VO₂peak, in less time overall.
Results were modest and didn’t include muscle gain.
For reshaping your body and raising your resting metabolic rate, you still need strength training.
The people in these studies looked a lot like busy, sedentary adults with extra weight—not like advanced lifters.
Anything is better than nothing.
Here’s how a personal trainer might translate this study into an actual plan for a member in that 25–55 range, with a busy schedule and some extra weight.
Step 1: Move first, optimize later.
Step 2: Add structure once you’re consistent.
After a week or two of regular movement, we might layer in:
Step 3: Match the method to you.
This meta-analysis tells us:
You can get meaningful improvements in fat loss and cardio fitness from both HIIT and steady cardio.
HIIT offers a small edge in efficiency, especially for waistline and VO₂peak, but:
The improvements were modest
Most participants were obese, sedentary, and supervised
There was no muscle gain advantage
For you, as a FITNESS SF member, the real winning formula usually looks like:
A mix of cardio styles (HIIT + moderate)
Consistent strength training
Nutrition that matches your goals
A plan you can stick with for months, not weeks
If you’re curious how to apply this to your body, schedule, and medical history, the best move is simple:
Book a Fitness Assessment with a FITNESS SF trainer.
We’ll look at your current fitness, time budget, and health background, then design a plan that might include HIIT—if it makes sense for you. The science is helpful. The magic happens when it’s tailored for sustainability.
*The content on this blog is provided for general informational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice. No responsibility or liability is assumed for any actions taken based on the information provided.