8 Tips to Lose Weight With Indoor Cycling

Indoor cycling

Verywell / Amelia Manley

Whatever your weight management goal is, exercise likely needs to be part of the equation. Exercise will help you preserve muscle mass, which is healthier for your body, will help make your weight loss easier to sustain for the long haul.

Besides helping to burn 400 to 600 calories in a 45-minute class, indoor cycling also helps rev up your metabolism (your body’s calorie-burning engine). It offers the opportunity to tone and strengthen all of the muscles in your legs, glutes, and core.

While a leisurely bike ride outside isn’t likely to help you lose significant weight, indoor cycling can. But to get the most out of an indoor cycling routine, you’ll want to heed some basic rules of nutrition and training. Here's what you need to know about adding indoor cycling to your weight management plan.

Eat Before Your Ride

Contrary to what you may have heard about the benefits of exercising on an empty stomach, it is smart to provide your body with the energy it needs to ride hard and get maximal benefits from the workout. Even if you take an early morning spin class, eat something small 30 minutes before you ride. This could be a small banana, a slice of toast with jam, or a handful of whole-grain cereal.

Do the same 1 or 2 hours before afternoon or evening cycling sessions. Aim to have a combination of protein and carbs (perhaps a small apple with 1 tablespoon of almond butter or 2 tablespoons of trail mix). 

Besides helping you fuel up for the workout, eating beforehand can help you burn extra calories, thanks to the thermic effect of food. Be sure to drink plenty of water before, during, and after the ride, too. Your body needs sufficient water intake to keep your metabolism humming and burning calories efficiently.

Replenish Your Muscles After a Ride

Within an hour after your workout, consume a combination of carbohydrates and protein (such as 12 ounces of low-fat chocolate milk or a small handful of walnuts with a pear) to replenish your muscle glycogen stores and provide amino acids for muscle repair and building. This will keep your muscles and your metabolism operating smoothly and prepare your body for your next workout.

Vary Pace and Difficulty

With most forms of exercise, interval training can pump up your metabolism more than exercising at a steady state—and the same is true of indoor cycling. Think of it as a way of tricking your body into burning calories faster. With their hard and stiff soles, a quality pair of spin shoes helps get the most out of an indoor cycling session.

By alternating bursts of harder pedaling (meaning, a faster cadence against heavier resistance) with a more comfortable pace, you will burn more calories during the workout than you would have at a steady, moderate pace. Varying pace and exertion will also trigger greater excess post-exercise oxygen consumption (the after-burn effect), causing you to continue to burn more calories for a few hours after cycling.

Switch Up Your Workouts

Do the same type of ride day after day, and your body will adapt to the activity, and you won’t get as big of a metabolic bang for your effort as you did initially. The solution is to regularly vary the types of rides you do (alternating between endurance, strength, interval, and race-oriented rides) and the intensity to coax your body into burning calories faster during and after the workout.

Split Your Workouts

If you don’t have time for a 45-minute cycling class, do two 25-minute solo sessions and you’ll burn just as many calories between the two as you would with one longer class. You might even push yourself harder during a shorter session, burning more calories. Either way, you will reap the after-burn effect twice in a day instead of once, allowing you to burn more calories in 24 hours.

We've researched and reviewed the best online cycling classes. If you're in the market for an online class, explore which option may be best for you.

Do Resistance Training

The more lean muscle you have, the higher your resting metabolic rate (RMR) will be, and the more calories you’ll burn 24/7. To build muscle outside the cycling studio, perform at least one set of strength-training exercises for each major muscle group two or three times per week, says Wayne Westcott, PhD, director of exercise science at Quincy College in Quincy, Massachusetts, and author of "Get Stronger, Feel Younger."

Strength training helps you add muscle mass and crank up your RMR in the process. Whether you use weight machines or free weights, resistance bands, or kettlebells to do your resistance training is up to you.

Refrain From Giving Yourself a Dietary Free Pass

Some people make the mistake of thinking that since indoor cycling is such a high-intensity exercise, they can eat whatever they want and still lose weight. Even if you ride your heart out, you will burn at most 400 or 600 calories in 45 minutes. If you treat yourself to a piece of chocolate cake, you will consume 537 calories, essentially eliminating the calorie incineration you did in cycling. 

Keep Moving

If you’re exhausted after a hardcore cycling session, don’t give yourself permission to become a sofa spud for the rest of the day. Do this and you will end up compromising the calorie-burning effects of your cycling workout and your progress toward your weight-loss goal. A better approach is to move more to lose more.

A Word From Verywell

Indoor cycling is a great way to burn calories and get fit at the same time. If you want to make sure you get the most out of your workout and have an impact on your weight management efforts, be sure to focus on nutrition before and after your rides.

You also should vary your workouts, keep moving throughout the day, and stick to your meal plan. And, if you are new to exercise and weight management, speak to a healthcare provider such as a registered dietitian before making too many changes to your eating and exercise regimen.

6 Sources
Verywell Fit uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.
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  2. Aragon AA, Schoenfeld BJ. Nutrient timing revisited: Is there a post-exercise anabolic window? J Int Soc Sports Nutr. 2013;10(1):5. doi:10.1186/1550-2783-10-5

  3. Calcagno M, Kahleova H, Alwarith J, et al. The thermic effect of food: A review. J Am Coll Nutr. 2019;38(6):547-551. doi:10.1080/07315724.2018.1552544

  4. American Council on Exercise. 7 Things to know about excess post-exercise oxygen consumption (EPOC).

  5. Michigan State University. The benefits of adding cross training to your exercise routine.

  6. McMurray RG, Soares J, Caspersen CJ, McCurdy T. Examining variations of resting metabolic rate of adults: A public health erspective. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2014;46(7):1352-1358. doi:10.1249/MSS.0000000000000232

By Stacey Colino, AFAA-GFI
Stacey Colino is a certified spinning instructor and group exercise instructor through the Aerobics and Fitness Association of America (AFAA).