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Home / Lifestyle

How to manage your blood sugar with exercise

By Hilary Achauer
New York Times·
21 May, 2025 12:00 AM5 mins to read

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A recent study found strength training was significantly more effective for controlling blood sugar levels than aerobic exercise. Photo / Getty Images

A recent study found strength training was significantly more effective for controlling blood sugar levels than aerobic exercise. Photo / Getty Images

Movement can be a powerful medicine for people with diabetes and other forms of insulin resistance. But intensity and timing can make a difference.

These days, more and more of us have to worry about our blood sugar.

Millions of people around the world have diabetes or prediabetes. Many millions more have some form of insulin resistance, which can make you tired, irritable and even dizzy. And all of these conditions become more common as we age.

The good news is that exercise can help. It’s at least as important as your diet for preventing and treating insulin resistance and diabetes. It can also help you lose weight, which is often the most important step in levelling out blood sugar.

Exercise has several unique ways to help your body process glucose, said Dr Donald Hensrud, a specialist in preventive medicine and nutrition and medical editor of The Mayo Clinic Diet. Although any exercise is good for you, the type of movement you choose and when you do it can play a big role in how much it helps.

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Here are some things you should think about when planning workouts, according to experts.

Exercise is essential for managing blood sugar

The causes of diabetes are complex. Family history, genetics, weight and diet certainly play a role. But it’s clear that exercise can dramatically lower your blood glucose, regardless of your diagnosis, and improve how well your body uses insulin.

In fact, research has shown that exercise is generally more effective at preventing diabetes than medication is (though it is important to use all types of treatment). During exercise, your muscle cells can more easily use the glucose in your blood. This lowers blood sugar directly and can also reduce the fat around your organs, an important risk factor for diabetes and insulin resistance, said Dr Gerald I. Shulman, a professor of medicine and physiology at the Yale School of Medicine.

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In particular, studies show that regular high-intensity interval training or moderate continuous exercise can make a difference, reversing prediabetes in almost 40% of the participants – although it could take months or even years for many people to see long-lasting changes.

Prioritise strength training and intensity

Any movement is better than none, and simply going for a walk can have benefits. But according to research, the two most effective ways to lower your blood sugar through exercise are high-intensity workouts and strength training.

A recent study found that strength training was significantly more effective for controlling blood sugar levels than aerobic exercise for people with Type 2 diabetes, and this likely holds true for other people worried about their blood sugar, Shulman said.

Also, both aerobic exercise and strength training create more mitochondria, which can help fight Type 2 diabetes, but weight lifting appears to be slightly more effective than aerobic exercise, assuming you are pushing yourself, Shulman said.

Strength training is especially important for older people, since insulin resistance and Type 2 diabetes accelerate the normal loss of muscle and strength that comes with age, particularly for women. While walking is good exercise for the heart, it generally won’t build much muscle, said Michael Joseph Gross, author of Stronger: The Untold Story of Muscles in Our Lives.

The way you strength-train is also important, he added. To be most effective, the weights should feel heavy. A systematic review of the research found that lifting challenging weights helped lower blood sugar more effectively than low-intensity strength training.

Consider alternating your strength training session with high-intensity interval training, which has been shown to be especially effective in managing blood sugar for people with prediabetes and Type 2 diabetes. If you have diabetes, consult a doctor before radically changing your fitness regimen.

When is the best time to work out?

If you do not have insulin resistance, the time of day you work out doesn’t matter much.

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But for people with prediabetes and Type 2 diabetes, studies suggest that afternoon exercise tends to help reduce blood sugar levels. That’s because blood sugar rises and falls in regular patterns over the course of the day, and as the day goes on, the body becomes less insulin sensitive. Thus afternoon exercise is typically less likely to cause dangerous glucose spikes.

Experts recommend working out at least three days per week, with no more than two days in a row without activity. For people with insulin resistance, including diabetes, the best time to exercise is about 30 minutes after starting a meal to prevent blood sugar spikes.

If morning workouts fit better with your schedule, try not to eat too many carbohydrates beforehand and start the day with a small meal of protein and healthy carbohydrates like fruit, vegetables and whole grains.

Prediabetes and new-onset diabetes are much more responsive to lifestyle changes like diet and exercise than longer-term cases, Hensrud said, so it’s important to address insulin resistance as soon as possible.

“I tell people with new diabetes they’re in control,” he said, “and the most important thing to do is decrease weight through dietary changes and exercise.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Written by: Hilary Achauer

©2025 THE NEW YORK TIMES

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