By Mark Chen — Used to only run. Thought lifting was not “real exercise.” He was wrong.
Last updated: May 2026
You have heard the terms. Aerobic. Anaerobic. Cardio. Strength training. You know both are good for you. You are not sure what the difference is or why it matters.
Here is the simple version.
Aerobic exercise uses oxygen to produce energy. It is low to moderate intensity. You can do it for a long time.
Anaerobic exercise does not use oxygen. It is high intensity. You can only do it for a short time.
You need both.
Aerobic Exercise (With Oxygen)
Aerobic means “with oxygen.” Your body uses oxygen to turn fat and carbohydrates into energy. This process is efficient but slow.
Characteristics of aerobic exercise:
- Low to moderate intensity
- You can talk in full sentences
- You can sustain it for 30+ minutes
- Your heart rate is elevated but steady
Examples:
| Activity | Why It Is Aerobic |
|---|---|
| Jogging | Steady pace. You can talk. |
| Cycling | Continuous movement. Low to moderate effort. |
| Swimming laps | Sustained. Breathing is controlled. |
| Walking | Low intensity. Can do for hours. |
| Dancing | Continuous movement. Moderate effort. |
Benefits of aerobic exercise:
| Benefit | What It Does |
|---|---|
| Heart health | Strengthens the heart muscle |
| Lung capacity | Improves oxygen use |
| Endurance | You can exercise longer |
| Fat burning | Uses fat for fuel during exercise |
| Mood | Releases endorphins. Reduces stress. |
Anaerobic Exercise (Without Oxygen)
Anaerobic means “without oxygen.” Your body uses stored energy (glycogen) to produce power. This process is fast but inefficient. It produces lactic acid, which causes muscle burn.
Characteristics of anaerobic exercise:
- High to very high intensity
- You cannot talk in full sentences
- You can only sustain it for short bursts (seconds to a few minutes)
- Your heart rate is very high
Examples:
| Activity | Why It Is Anaerobic |
|---|---|
| Sprinting | All-out effort. Lasts seconds. |
| Heavy weightlifting | Max effort for a few reps. |
| HIIT (high-intensity interval training) | Short bursts of max effort. |
| Jumping | Explosive. Short duration. |
| Climbing | Intense. Short bursts of effort. |
Benefits of anaerobic exercise:
| Benefit | What It Does |
|---|---|
| Muscle growth | Builds muscle mass and strength |
| Bone density | Strengthens bones |
| Power | Improves explosiveness and speed |
| Metabolism | Burns calories even after exercise (afterburn effect) |
| Blood sugar | Improves insulin sensitivity |
The Key Differences at a Glance
| Factor | Aerobic | Anaerobic |
|---|---|---|
| Uses oxygen | Yes | No |
| Intensity | Low to moderate | High to very high |
| Duration | Long (30+ minutes) | Short (seconds to 2 minutes) |
| Talk test | Can talk in full sentences | Cannot talk |
| Primary fuel | Fat + carbs | Stored glycogen |
| Produces lactic acid | No | Yes |
| Best for | Endurance, heart health | Strength, power, muscle |
Why You Need Both
Aerobic exercise strengthens your heart and lungs. It builds endurance. It helps with weight management.
Anaerobic exercise builds muscle and bone. It makes you stronger and more powerful. It improves your metabolism.
If you only do aerobic exercise, you will have good endurance but weaker muscles. Your metabolism may slow down over time. You may lose bone density.
If you only do anaerobic exercise, you will be strong but may lack endurance. Your heart and lungs may not get enough conditioning. You may get winded easily.
The best fitness plans include both.
How Much of Each?
| Goal | Aerobic | Anaerobic |
|---|---|---|
| General health | 150 minutes per week (moderate) | 2-3 strength sessions per week |
| Weight loss | 200-300 minutes per week | 2-3 strength sessions per week |
| Endurance sport | High (sport-specific) | 1-2 strength sessions per week |
| Muscle building | 1-2 sessions per week | 3-4 strength sessions per week |
Adjust based on your goals. But do not drop either completely.
A Sample Week with Both
| Day | Activity | Type |
|---|---|---|
| Monday | 30-minute jog | Aerobic |
| Tuesday | Full body strength training | Anaerobic |
| Wednesday | 45-minute bike ride | Aerobic |
| Thursday | HIIT workout (20 minutes) | Both |
| Friday | Rest or light walk | Active recovery |
| Saturday | Heavy lifting | Anaerobic |
| Sunday | Long walk or hike | Aerobic |
This is one example. The specific days do not matter. The mix matters.
Common Myths
“Cardio kills gains.”
Lifting heavy and doing cardio on the same day might limit muscle growth. But moderate cardio on separate days will not kill your gains. In fact, it helps recovery.
“You only need cardio to lose weight.”
Cardio burns calories during exercise. Strength training builds muscle. More muscle means a higher metabolism. You burn more calories at rest. Both help with weight loss.
“Anaerobic exercise is only for athletes.”
False. Everyone needs strength and power. It helps with daily activities. Carrying groceries. Climbing stairs. Playing with kids. Preventing falls as you age.
How to Start
If you do only cardio: Add one strength session per week. Start with bodyweight exercises. Squats, push-ups, lunges. Then add weights.
If you only lift: Add one cardio session per week. Start with walking or light jogging. Work up to 30 minutes.
You do not need to do everything at once. Small changes add up.
The Bottom Line
Aerobic exercise is for endurance. Anaerobic exercise is for strength and power. Both are essential.
Do not pick a side. Do both.
Your heart will thank you. Your muscles will thank you. Your future self will thank you.
About the author: Mark Chen used to only run. He thought lifting was not real exercise. He was wrong. Now he does both.
This article is for informational purposes. Consult a doctor before starting a new exercise routine.