I Was Crushing My Evening Workouts but Sabotaging My Sleep. Here's How I Fixed My Internal Clock
Picture this: it’s been a few days since you last made it to the gym. Work has been full on, the week has built up, and a couple of cheat meals have slipped in along the way. What you really need is a release, and the gym is calling. Work finishes later than expected, but you head there anyway. You find your space, lift some weights, and finally burn off that restless energy that’s been building from work, stress, and everyday life. You leave feeling relieved, confident you’ll enjoy dinner, get a good night’s sleep, and start fresh tomorrow.
But the next morning tells a different story. You struggled to fall asleep, woke up a few times during the night, and didn’t get the deep recovery sleep your body needed. Now you’re dealing with sore muscles, fatigue, and yesterday’s hard workout still hanging over you. For many people, this routine is surprisingly common. The good news? There’s a smarter way to approach evening training.
Why Late-Night Workouts Can Backfire
There’s a reason your body sometimes struggles to fall asleep after a tough evening workout. It largely comes down to heat and adrenaline. Exercise raises your core temperature because your muscles produce heat while they’re working. Hard workouts can increase core temperature by around 1.8–3.6°F, which might not sound like much, but it’s a strong signal to the body that it should stay awake and active. Earlier in the day, that’s helpful because it boosts energy, focus, and alertness. Late at night, however, it can delay the body’s natural cooling process that normally prepares us for sleep.
The Cortisol Problem Most People Don’t Consider
Cortisol also plays a role. This hormone follows a natural daily rhythm, rising in the morning to help you wake up and gradually declining throughout the day. Things like natural light exposure, coffee, and intense exercise can all amplify that early-day boost.
“The stresses of modern life, like constant information overload and disrupted daily rhythms, can hold the body in a state of chronic alertness, which works against our natural sleep-wake cycle and restorative rest," says Sara Mednick, a cognitive scientist and sleep expert at the University of California, Irvine.
So what happens if you lift heavy weights late in the evening? It’s not necessarily harmful, but it can work against your body’s natural rhythm. High-intensity training activates the body’s stress responses, something that’s useful during the day but less helpful when your system should be shifting toward recovery and sleep.
What Sleep Experts Say About Late Training
That’s why recovery after late workouts becomes especially important. Carla DiGirolamo says many people underestimate how much cooldown time the body needs after evening training. “If you train later in the evening, the key is spending more time cooling down with stretching, breathwork, meditation, or other screen-free wind-down activities to help the body bring its stress response back to baseline.”
Skipping that cooldown and going straight to stimulating activities, like scrolling social media or turning on the TV, can delay the nervous system’s return to baseline and make it harder to fall asleep.
DiGirolamo also points out that people often misunderstand the relationship between cortisol and recovery. “Recovery is what regulates cortisol, not the other way around," he explains. "The real goal is addressing the root causes of stress on the body, such as poor recovery, inadequate fueling, illness, or life stress.”
Why Zone 2 Training Works Better at Night
A 2025 study from Monash University tracking 14,689 people across more than four million nights of sleep found that high-strain exercise close to bedtime delayed sleep onset and reduced sleep quality, especially when performed within four hours of bed. Researchers concluded that if people train late, lower-intensity activity is less disruptive to sleep.
Moderate aerobic exercise may also help regulate the body’s circadian rhythm, the internal clock that controls sleep and wakefulness. Because the intensity is lower, body temperature and stress hormones return to baseline more quickly, allowing sleep hormones to rise naturally later in the evening.
The Best Evening Workout If You Want Great Sleep
Evening workouts don’t have to disappear from your routine; they may just need a slight adjustment. Instead of heavy lifting or high-intensity intervals, consider sessions that place less stress on the body. Lighter resistance training, mobility work, yoga, or Pilates can all work well later in the day. These types of sessions still deliver physical and mental benefits without pushing the nervous system into overdrive. Evening workouts can also be a good time to focus on core work, recovery, and maintenance, while saving heavier strength sessions for the morning or early afternoon.
Small habits post-workout can also make a difference. A hot shower before bed allows your body to cool down naturally, which supports sleep. Slow breathing with longer exhales can also help calm the nervous system. If it helps, imagine you have a “cortisol gauge.” Late workouts aren’t necessarily bad, but they require a little more attention to recovery.
Related: Looking to Pack on Size? Trainers Swear by This Brutal High-Volume Rep Scheme
Evening Workout Tips for Better Sleep
- Use evening sessions for core, recovery, or maintenance work
- Save heavy lifting for the morning or early afternoon
- Stick to light cardio at night to avoid overstimulating your body
- Take a hot shower before bed to help your body cool down
- Calm your nervous system with slow breathing and longer exhales
Post-Work Workout Ideas That Won’t Ruin Your Sleep
- Light Rowing: Row steadily for 25–30 minutes at a comfortable pace. You should be able to hold a conversation.
- Easy Resistance Cycling + Core: Cycle at low resistance for 25 to 30 minutes, then finish with 10 minutes of core work such as planks, dead bugs, or side planks.
- Light Run: Head out for a 20–30 minute run at around 60% effort, focusing on a smooth, relaxed pace rather than speed.
Related: Cardiologists Warn to Never, Ever Ignore These Simple Signs of Chronic Stress

