Cardio for weight loss doesn’t require a treadmill, a bike, or any equipment at all. Your bodyweight is enough — if the workouts are structured correctly. These four routines are designed around a single principle: you need to raise your heart rate and keep it elevated long enough to burn meaningful calories. Each one is complete as written; no equipment substitutions needed.
How Cardio Drives Weight Loss
Cardio contributes to weight loss through calorie expenditure. The math matters here: you need a calorie deficit (burning more than you consume) to lose fat. A 150-lb person doing moderate-intensity cardio burns roughly 8–10 calories per minute. A 20-minute session creates a 160–200 calorie deficit; a 30-minute HIIT session, 250–350 calories. Three sessions per week from cardio alone = 500–1,000+ weekly deficit, which is meaningful when combined with diet.
Bodyweight cardio has an additional advantage: many exercises involve multiple large muscle groups simultaneously, increasing calorie burn beyond pure “cardio” activity.
Workout 1 — HIIT Beginner (20 Minutes)
Format: 30 seconds work / 30 seconds rest. 3 rounds. Rest 2 minutes between rounds.
- March in place
- Step touch (side-to-side)
- Knee drives (standing, alternate)
- Squat and stand
- Arm circles while marching
Good for: Complete beginners, returning after time off, anyone with joint issues who needs low-impact options.
Workout 2 — Steady-State Home Cardio (30 Minutes)
Format: Continuous circuit, moderate pace. Repeat 4 rounds. 45-second transition rest between rounds.
- High knees — 1 minute
- Jumping jacks — 1 minute
- Shadow boxing — 1 minute
- Rest 30 seconds
Target heart rate: 60–70% of max (roughly 220 minus your age × 0.65). At this intensity, you can speak in short sentences but not hold a full conversation. Stay in this zone for the entire 30 minutes. Steady-state cardio is particularly effective for fat oxidation during the session itself.
Workout 3 — HIIT Intermediate (25 Minutes)
Format: 40 seconds work / 20 seconds rest. 4 rounds. 90-second rest between rounds.
- Burpees (or no-jump variation: step out instead of jump)
- Mountain climbers
- Jump squats (or fast squats with no air if avoiding impact)
- Push-up + shoulder tap
- High knees
This is your highest-intensity option. If you can hold a conversation during this, you’re not working hard enough. The 20-second rest exists to let you reset, not fully recover. That sustained effort is what maximizes the post-exercise calorie burn (EPOC — the “afterburn effect” that continues for 24–48 hours after high-intensity training).
Workout 4 — The 10-20-30 Interval (25 Minutes)
This protocol comes from research showing it produces superior cardiovascular adaptation vs. standard moderate-intensity cardio in less time. For each exercise, you do:
- 30 seconds: easy pace
- 20 seconds: moderate pace
- 10 seconds: maximum effort
Then rest 2 minutes. Repeat 5 times (one exercise per round):
- Round 1: High knees
- Round 2: Jumping jacks
- Round 3: Mountain climbers
- Round 4: Shadow boxing
- Round 5: Burpees
The 10-second all-out sprint is key — it needs to be genuinely maximum effort. This workout looks easy on paper. Done correctly, it isn’t.
How to Build a Weekly Cardio Plan for Weight Loss
For fat loss, 3 cardio sessions per week is the effective minimum. A strong starting plan:
- Monday: Workout 2 (steady-state, 30 min)
- Wednesday: Workout 3 (HIIT intermediate)
- Saturday: Workout 1 or 4 depending on energy
Add strength training on the other days — muscle mass raises resting metabolism, which accelerates fat loss beyond what cardio alone produces. The combination of cardio for calorie burn and strength training for metabolic effect is more powerful than either alone.
Tracking Progress
Weight on a scale isn’t the only metric. Better indicators of whether the cardio is working:
- Resting heart rate decreasing (check your pulse in the morning)
- Same workouts feel easier at the same intensity — you need to increase difficulty
- Measurements (waist, hips) changing even when scale doesn’t (muscle gain offsetting fat loss)
- Energy and sleep quality improving — both reliably correlate with improved cardiovascular fitness