People should add three to five minutes for a warm-up and another few minutes to cool down, says Ms Keating, who is lead author of a paper on the study published in the Journal of Obesity.
"A growing number of people are substituting high-intensity interval training for regular aerobic workouts, but it is is not a fast track to fat loss if you're overweight," says Ms Keating.
"High-intensity burst training does deliver important benefits like increased fitness, but it doesn't have a fat furnace effect if you carry weight around the middle.
"Some trainers spruik high-intensity workouts as the most efficient training method, but this doesn't mean it translates to fat loss if you're overweight," says co-researcher Dr Nathan Johnson.
But this is based on studies using people who were already lean and healthy, he says.
The researchers were comparing the two types of aerobic training, but Ms Keating says it is healthy to include resistance training, such as weights or circuits, in a weekly exercise regime.
"For fat loss, do resistance training alongside aerobics training, not instead of it," she says.
- AAP