Exercise and PCOS: Does Intensity Actually Matter?

Tamika Woods 1 min read

Exercise is one of the most commonly recommended lifestyle strategies for managing PCOS. But one question has remained unclear for a long time:

Does the type or intensity of exercise actually make a difference?

A new systematic review and meta-analysis looked at this more closely, comparing high-intensity, moderate-intensity, and low-intensity exercise across multiple clinical trials in women with PCOS.

The findings offer some helpful clarity - but also reinforce just how individual this condition really is.

 

 

Why Exercise Is So Important In PCOS

PCOS is not just a reproductive condition — it’s deeply connected to metabolic health.

Many women with PCOS experience:
• Insulin resistance
• Elevated fasting insulin
• Dyslipidaemia (cholesterol imbalances)
• Increased cardiometabolic risk

These underlying drivers influence everything from ovulation and hormones to energy, weight regulation, and long-term health.

Exercise is often recommended because it can improve:
• Insulin sensitivity
• Cardiovascular fitness
• Body composition
• Metabolic markers

But until now, we haven’t had clear guidance on which type of exercise works best.

The Three Types of Exercise Compared

The researchers looked at three main categories:

High-Intensity Interval Training (HIIT)
Short bursts of very intense exercise followed by recovery periods

Moderate-Intensity Continuous Training (MICT)
Steady, sustained exercise (like brisk walking, cycling, or jogging)

Low-Intensity Training (LIT)
Gentle movement such as slow walking or stretching

They compared these against each other — and against doing no structured exercise at all.

What The Research Found

The results showed that different types of exercise influence different aspects of PCOS.

There was no single “best” approach - instead, each had its own strengths.

Moderate Intensity Exercise: Best For Insulin Resistance

Moderate-intensity exercise was the only type that showed a clear improvement in insulin resistance.

This is significant because insulin resistance is one of the core drivers of PCOS.

Improvements here can influence:
• Hormonal balance
• Ovulation
• Energy levels
• Long-term metabolic health

This type of training seems particularly valuable for foundational metabolic support.

High-Intensity Exercise: Best For Fitness and Certain Markers

High-intensity training showed the strongest improvements in:

Cardiorespiratory fitness (VO2 max)
Fasting insulin levels
LDL cholesterol (the “less favourable” cholesterol)

This suggests HIIT may be especially useful for:
• Improving fitness capacity
• Supporting cardiovascular health
• Targeting specific metabolic markers

However, it did not significantly improve insulin resistance overall in this analysis.

Low-Intensity Exercise: Limited Impact Alone

Low-intensity exercise did not show strong measurable improvements in the key metabolic outcomes studied.

That doesn’t mean it has no value — but on its own, it may not be enough to significantly shift metabolic drivers in PCOS.

It may still play an important role in:
• Recovery
• Nervous system regulation
• Building consistency and habit

What Didn’t Change (Across All Exercise Types)

Interestingly, none of the exercise types showed significant improvements in:

• Body weight (BMI)
• Blood glucose
• Triglycerides
• HDL cholesterol
• Blood pressure

This is important - because it challenges the idea that exercise is primarily about weight loss in PCOS.

Instead, many of the benefits are happening beneath the surface, at a metabolic level.

PCOS Is Not A One-Size-Fits-All Condition

One of the most important takeaways from this research is that different exercise styles affect different pathways.

This reinforces a key principle:

PCOS management should be individualised.

For example:
• Someone with significant insulin resistance may benefit more from moderate-intensity training
• Someone focused on fitness and cardiovascular health may respond well to HIIT
• Others may need a combination depending on their symptoms, capacity, and lifestyle

Why The Evidence Is Still Evolving

Even though this was a large analysis, there are still limitations:

• The overall certainty of evidence was low to moderate
• Studies varied in duration, intensity, and participant characteristics
• Not all outcomes were consistently measured across trials

So while we can see patterns, we still don’t have definitive “prescriptions.”

What This Means In Practice

This research shifts the conversation away from “which exercise is best” - and toward what your body needs most.

Exercise in PCOS is not just about burning calories or losing weight.

It’s about influencing:
• Insulin signalling
• Hormonal regulation
• Cardiovascular health
• Metabolic resilience

Different types of movement can support different pieces of that puzzle.

One of the things I find most helpful about this area of research is that it moves us away from extremes and closer to nuance.

For a long time, exercise advice in PCOS has been confusing and often conflicting. Some women are told to push harder with high-intensity training, while others are told to avoid it completely and focus only on gentle movement. What this research highlights is something much more grounded.

Different types of exercise are not “good” or “bad”,  they simply influence different systems in the body.

Moderate-intensity movement appears to have the strongest effect on insulin resistance, which sits at the core of PCOS for many women. Higher-intensity training seems to improve fitness capacity and certain metabolic markers. And lower-intensity movement, while not as powerful metabolically on its own, still plays a role in supporting overall regulation and consistency.

This reflects something we see clinically all the time.

PCOS is not a single-pathway condition. It involves metabolism, hormones, inflammation, and the nervous system, all interacting together. When we understand this, the goal becomes less about choosing the “perfect” exercise, and more about building a rhythm of movement that supports your body across multiple levels.

For some women, that might mean focusing on consistency with moderate movement. For others, it may include introducing higher-intensity sessions in a way that feels supportive rather than depleting. The key is alignment with your current physiology, not forcing your body into a rigid approach.

This is the lens I take inside The PCOS Repair Protocol. The book is designed to help you understand why your symptoms are happening, and how different strategies, including nutrition, movement, and targeted support influence the underlying biology of PCOS.

Because when you understand what your body is responding to, you can make decisions with far more clarity and confidence.

Discover Your PCOS Type

Take our comprehensive quiz to identify your specific PCOS type and get personalized recommendations for managing your symptoms.

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Tamika Woods

About Tamika Woods

Tamika Woods is a Clinical Nutritionist and bestselling author of PCOS Repair Protocol. She holds a Bachelor of Health Science (Nutritional Medicine) from Endeavour College of Natural Health and a Bachelor of Education from UNSW, graduating with Honours in both.

She is a certified Fertility Awareness Method Educator and ANTA member, and the recipient of the ANTA Graduate Award. After a decade managing her own PCOS, Tam now helps women find hormonal balance through evidence-based protocols.

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