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Thyroid and Exercise: What You Need to Know

Understanding the connection between thyroid and exercise became important to me when a close friend was diagnosed with hypothyroidism at 30 and couldn’t figure out why her workouts stopped producing results. She was doing everything “right” — eating well, training consistently — but gaining weight and feeling exhausted. Her thyroid was the missing piece, and once she adjusted her exercise approach, things started improving within weeks.

About 20 million Americans have some form of thyroid disease, according to the American Thyroid Association, and up to 60% don’t know it. Your thyroid controls your metabolism, heart rate, body temperature, and energy production. When it’s not functioning properly, exercise feels different, recovery takes longer, and results come slower — or not at all.

How Your Thyroid Affects Exercise Performance

Your thyroid gland produces two main hormones: T3 (triiodothyronine) and T4 (thyroxine). These hormones regulate how your cells use energy. When levels are off, everything about exercise changes:

Hypothyroidism (underactive thyroid):

  • Lower metabolic rate (burning fewer calories at rest and during exercise)
  • Fatigue and reduced exercise tolerance
  • Slower recovery between workouts
  • Muscle weakness and joint stiffness
  • Higher resting heart rate during exercise for the same effort level
  • Weight gain or difficulty losing weight despite being active

Hyperthyroidism (overactive thyroid):

  • Elevated heart rate at rest and during exercise
  • Muscle wasting and weakness despite eating enough
  • Heat intolerance during workouts
  • Shortness of breath at lower intensity levels
  • Anxiety or nervousness that can feel like overtraining
  • Unintentional weight loss and difficulty gaining muscle

Best Exercises for Hypothyroidism

If your thyroid is underactive, your body is essentially running at a lower gear. You can still exercise effectively, but the approach needs adjusting.

Strength training (3 times per week):

This is the top priority. Building muscle increases your metabolic rate, which directly counteracts the metabolic slowdown from hypothyroidism. Focus on compound movements:

  • Squats — 3×8-10
  • Push-ups or chest press — 3×8-10
  • Rows — 3×8-10
  • Shoulder press — 3×10
  • Glute bridges — 3×12
  • Deadlifts or hip hinges — 3×8

Moderate cardio (3-4 times per week):

  • Walking — 30 minutes at a brisk pace
  • Cycling — 20-30 minutes
  • Swimming — 20-30 minutes

Yoga or stretching (2 times per week):

Hypothyroidism can cause joint stiffness and muscle tightness. Gentle yoga helps with mobility and also supports the stress response, since elevated cortisol can further suppress thyroid function.

A comfortable yoga mat* makes floor work and stretching much more inviting, especially when joint stiffness is an issue.

Best Exercises for Hyperthyroidism

An overactive thyroid puts your body in a constant state of overdrive. Exercise needs to be calming rather than stimulating until your levels are controlled.

Recommended:

  • Walking — low intensity, 20-30 minutes
  • Yoga — particularly restorative or gentle hatha styles
  • Light strength training — lower weights, higher reps (2×15), focus on maintaining muscle mass
  • Tai chi — low impact, stress-reducing
  • Swimming — the water helps regulate body temperature

Avoid until thyroid is controlled:

  • High-intensity cardio (HIIT, running, intense cycling)
  • Heavy lifting
  • Hot yoga or exercising in heat
  • Long-duration endurance exercise

Hyperthyroidism already elevates your heart rate and metabolism. Adding intense exercise on top can strain your cardiovascular system and accelerate muscle loss. Once medication brings your levels into normal range, you can gradually increase intensity.

Does Exercise Affect Thyroid Hormone Levels?

Yes, but the relationship is nuanced:

  • Moderate exercise may slightly increase T3 and T4 levels temporarily, which is beneficial for hypothyroid patients
  • Intense or prolonged exercise can temporarily decrease thyroid hormone levels and increase reverse T3 (an inactive form), which is problematic for people already dealing with low levels
  • Overtraining suppresses thyroid function. This is why hypothyroid patients who do intense daily training often feel worse, not better
  • Consistent moderate exercise over time appears to improve thyroid function in subclinical hypothyroidism, based on several studies

The takeaway: moderate, consistent exercise supports thyroid function. Extreme exercise suppresses it. If you have a thyroid condition, more isn’t better.

Recovery Takes Longer — Plan for It

One of the biggest adjustments my friend had to make was accepting that her recovery time was genuinely different. What used to take 24 hours now took 48-72 hours.

Recovery guidelines with thyroid conditions:

  • Take at least 1 full rest day between strength sessions for the same muscle group
  • Don’t increase workout volume or intensity by more than 10% per week
  • Sleep is critical — aim for 8+ hours. Thyroid hormones play a role in sleep quality, so this can be harder, but it’s more important.
  • Watch for signs of overtraining: persistent fatigue, elevated resting heart rate, getting sick frequently, mood changes
  • Track your resting heart rate in the morning — if it’s elevated 5+ beats above your normal, take an extra rest day

Having a recovery plan is non-negotiable when your body already struggles to bounce back.

Timing Exercise With Thyroid Medication

If you take levothyroxine (Synthroid) or similar thyroid medication:

  • Take it on an empty stomach, 30-60 minutes before eating
  • Wait at least 1 hour after taking medication before exercising — physical activity can affect absorption
  • If you exercise first thing in the morning, take your medication right when you wake up, then work out after 60 minutes
  • Calcium supplements, iron, and coffee can interfere with absorption — keep these separated by 4 hours

Signs You Need to Adjust Your Routine

Your thyroid levels can fluctuate, especially during dose adjustments or seasonal changes. Watch for:

  • Workouts feeling disproportionately hard — what was moderate now feels intense
  • Weight changes without lifestyle changes — could signal a shift in thyroid levels
  • Persistent muscle soreness lasting 3+ days after a normal workout
  • Temperature regulation issues — overheating easily or not warming up during exercise
  • Brain fog during or after workouts

If these pop up, check your thyroid levels. Don’t push through symptoms assuming you’re just “out of shape.” A beginner routine is a reasonable fallback during periods when your levels are being adjusted.

Start Smart, Stay Consistent

If you have a thyroid condition, exercise is still one of the best things you can do. It helps manage weight, boosts mood, builds the muscle mass that supports metabolism, and can even improve thyroid function when done at the right intensity. Start with 3-4 sessions per week at moderate intensity, track how you feel, and adjust based on your body’s response rather than following a generic program that doesn’t account for your thyroid.

About me
At 22, I was the girl who came home from work, sat on the couch, and binged shows and gamed until midnight. Every day. I'd gained weight without even noticing - until one day I did notice, and I didn't like what I saw.

I started small. Daily walks. Then cycling. Then hiking on weekends. Eventually I picked up swimming and weightlifting. Nine years later, I'm 31 and I genuinely feel better than I ever have.

I'm not going to pretend I have a perfect body - I'm still chasing that last layer of fat between me and a visible six-pack. But I move every day, I lift every week, and I'm closer than I've ever been. Better eating habits and consistent movement got me here. They'll get me the rest of the way.

This site is everything I've learned along the way. No certifications, no sponsorships - just a woman who figured out what works at home through years of trial and error. And researching so many articles myself and watching youtube.