āThere are many different styles of kickboxing,ā explains Chris Gagliardi, CPT, CSCS, an ACE-certified personal trainer and NSCA-certified strength and conditioning specialist. āOne style, the combat sport, is designed for fighting, while cardio kickboxing removes the fight aspect and mainly focuses on enhancing your health by improving your fitness.ā
Whether you climb into a real or hypothetical ring, the practice can be a fantastic addition to your workout routine. āDuring a kickboxing classāeither at martial arts or combat sports school or cardio kickboxing group exercise classāyouāll be using your entire body to generate force, avoid strikes, and establish positioning for offensive and defensive maneuvers,ā Gagliardi says. As a result, all this effort means the sport can boost both muscular and cardiorespiratory fitness, he says.
Does that mean kickboxing counts as both strength and cardio? Not so fast. Weāre digging into that question below with the help of Gagliardi and Grace Bellman, DPT, CSCS, a doctor of physical therapy and studio manager at Hit House, a Muay Thai-inspired kickboxing studio in New York City.
Does kickboxing count as strength training?
Kickboxing can help you get stronger, but itās hard to say definitively that it can count as strength work.
Letās start with the upsides. āWhile kickboxing isnāt structured like a typical strength training session, participants can expect to improve both upper-body and lower-body muscular fitnessāaka muscular strength and endurance,ā Gagliardi says. āDuring the work portions of the workout, you’ll be squatting, lunging, rotating, punching, kicking, jumping, flexing, extending, abducting, adducting, and using your muscles in various combinations that will no doubt build muscular fitness.ā
This is especially true if your class involves calisthenics work, like holding planks for active recovery, doing push-ups between combinations, or adding squat jumps between punches.
If your kickboxing training doesnāt include much strength and conditioning work and focuses primarily on technique, you could reach the max muscle-building benefits once you hit a certain proficiency level. āOur bodies learn to adapt to new stimuli through cardiovascular, musculoskeletal, and neuromuscular adaptations to meet the demands of the physical activity weāre performing,ā Bellman explains.
Translation: When you challenge your body through exercise, you prompt it to adapt and become stronger. If youāre a beginner, things like punching and kicking will challenge your strength, but for someone more experienced, those wonāt be demanding enough to provoke adaptations. āFor those new to the kickboxing world or new to exercise in general, muscular changes in strength and power may be more notable than those of an experienced athlete or Muay Thai fighter,ā Bellman explains.
When evaluating kickboxing as a means of building strength, you also need to look at which muscles it works. Itās generally considered a full-body workout, but there are specific muscles youāre most likely to strengthen with the sport, including your shoulders, upper back, and core, Bellman says. Youāll work your legs and hips, too, but to a lesser degree.
One small 2014 study1, for example, showed that people who participated in kickboxing three times a week for five weeks experienced significant improvements in upper-body muscle power, aerobic power, anaerobic fitness, flexibility, speed, and agility, Gagliardi says. However, the participants didnāt show an increase in lower-body power.
For a comprehensive and well-rounded full-body strength routine, youād want to ensure youāre also sufficiently challenging the large, powerful muscle groups in your lower body, like your quads, hamstrings, and glutes. A kickboxing session that includes moves like lunges and squats can help check off that box, though without adding external resistance (like weights), you may also hit the ceiling of strength adaptations in this situation.
The TL;DR? āKickboxing does promote positive changes in your musculoskeletal health, including increases in muscular strength. However, I would not consider kickboxing strength training exclusively,ā Bellman says.
āUltimately, the goal of physical exercise is to improve your health and fitness while doing something you enjoy. If you enjoy kickboxing exercise, you’re more likely to do it, and that’s most important.ā āGrace Bellman, DPT, CSCS
Does kickboxing count as cardio?
In many cases, yes. āKickboxing does count as cardio by the simple definition that it elevates your heart rate and breathing,ā Bellman says.
Thatās right: Cardio exercise is any activity that makes you breathe harder and elevates your heart rate, per the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The CDC recommends adults log at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity cardio activity per weekāmeaning you need to hit that moderate-intensity threshold for a workout to count toward your cardio quota. To gauge your intensity, you can use a simple talk test (moderate is when youāre exercising hard enough to talk but not sing) or monitor your heart rate while you work out (moderate would be considered 50 to 70 percent of your maximum heart rate).
āDuring a kickboxing workout, your heart rate will be elevated above your resting rate for the entire workout, including times of active recovery,ā Gagliardi says. As a result, you can expect to see improvements in the cardiorespiratory system, he saysāand thatās the main benefit of cardio exercise. In the 2014 study mentioned above, for example, researchers found that kickboxing training sessions put participants between about 71 and 77 percent of their max heart rate and were sufficient for eliciting cardio benefits.
That said, a kickboxing workoutās actual cardio level can depend on the class’s structure, style, and intensity, Bellman says. The research on the sportās fitness benefits is limited, but studies on the cardio effect of other martial arts like Taekwondo have reported mixed results; some research says Taekwondo has no impact2 on cardio fitness, while others consider it a viable and efficient method3 of cardiovascular conditioning. Researchers propose that variations in workout intensity may be behind the difference.
Think of it this way: If youāre drilling punches slowly, focusing on form and your feet planted, you likely wonāt lose your breath and end up in that moderate-intensity state. Quicker, more complex combinations, including footwork, kicks, defensive moves, or incorporating intervals of cardio moves (jump roping, fast feet, jumping jacks), could all turn up the intensity of a kickboxing workout, ensuring your cardiorespiratory system is working hard.
Other significant benefits of kickboxing
Adopting a kickboxing routine may not get you off the hook for strength or cardio, depending on exactly how you trainābut there are so many other benefits that make this practice worth your time.
For starters, kickboxing can boost balance, coordination, mobility, and agility, Bellman says. The practice often requires learning, practicing, and executing combinations of punches and kicks. āThis motor learning process not only tests your mental acuity but also requires your body to coordinate new movement patterns before performing them with high force production,ā she says. The practice can also build mental toughness and humility, encourage camaraderie with fellow participants, and help you learn self-defense skills, Gagliardi adds.
Though these perks may not get as much hype as cardio fitness or strength-building, theyāre not consolation prizes. āThese benefits outside of building strength and improving cardio are just as important for injury prevention and long-term health,ā Bellman says. āAs we age, our balance, coordination, and reaction time often decreases, leaving us more at risk for falls or injury. Kickboxing challenges the bodyās balance, coordination, and agility systems to improve our ability to react and cope with perturbations, changes to our base of support, and loss of balance.ā
Finally, kickboxing comes with an emotional health benefit that not all other forms of exercise can claim: an incredible sense of empowerment. āAfter working at Hit House for two years, Iāve heard from many regular class attendees that they feel an increase in confidence and often surprise themselves with what theyāre able to do during class,ā Bellman says. This boost in self-confidence, ability to have fun, and desire to consistently advance keeps them coming back. āUltimately, the goal of physical exercise is to improve your health and fitness while doing something you enjoy,ā she continues. āIf you enjoy kickboxing exercise, you’re more likely to do it, and that’s most important.ā
The bottom line
Kickboxing can build up your muscular strength and endurance as well as your cardiorespiratory fitnessābut that doesnāt mean it counts as both cardio and strength work. Itāll depend on exactly what your training is like, but the practice is generally more likely to meet the qualifications of a cardio workout rather than a strength one.
If you go to kickboxing classes a few times a week, consider complementing that routine with two days of dedicated strength training to keep your muscles sharp and meet the CDCās exercise recommendations for adults. If you want to ensure itās ticking off your cardio checkbox, keep an eye on your effort level during a session with a heart-rate monitor, smartwatch, or the talk test.
Regardless of all the above, if you like kickboxing, itās worth keeping it in your routine. āFor many people, kickboxing becomes a way of life that includes attending and participating in classes as a regular part of your healthy lifestyle,ā Gagliardi says. Even if it doesnāt color perfectly within the lines of a strength or cardio workout, any exercise you enjoy is worth sticking to.
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Ouergui I, Hssin N, Haddad M, Padulo J, Franchini E, Gmada N, Bouhlel E. The effects of five weeks of kickboxing training on physical fitness. Muscles Ligaments Tendons J. 2014 Jul 14;4(2):106-13. PMID: 25332919; PMCID: PMC4187584. -
Melhim AF. Aerobic and anaerobic power responses to the practice of taekwon-do. Br J Sports Med. 2001 Aug;35(4):231-4. doi: 10.1136/bjsm.35.4.231. PMID: 11477015; PMCID: PMC1724351. -
Toskovic NN, Blessing D, Williford HN. The effect of experience and gender on cardiovascular and metabolic responses with dynamic Tae Kwon Do exercise. J Strength Cond Res. 2002 May;16(2):278-85. PMID: 11991782.