- - How Often Should I Run?
Cycling and Fitness Answers — Fast, Clear, and Real.
This blog stays pop-up free thanks to small commissions from your link clicks. It never affects your price.
As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.
Last Updated: March 2026
Runners usually run against traffic so they can see approaching vehicles. Cyclists ride with traffic because bicycles are legally treated like vehicles in most places. Riding with traffic makes your movement predictable to drivers and follows the same rules as cars.
Both choices come down to one thing: visibility and predictability.
Most running safety guidelines recommend facing traffic when running on roads without sidewalks.
Running against traffic turns the situation into a two-way awareness system. The driver sees you, and you see the driver.
If a car gets too close, you can move instantly. That’s the biggest safety advantage runners have.
Cyclists ride with traffic because bicycles are legally considered vehicles in most traffic laws.
That means cyclists must follow the same basic rules as cars:
There’s also a practical reason.
If cyclists rode against traffic, the closing speed between a bike and a car would double. Drivers would have much less time to react.
For example:
If the cyclist rides with traffic, the driver approaches at about 30 mph.
If the cyclist rides against traffic, the closing speed becomes about 60 mph.
That makes crashes far more dangerous.
Whether you’re running or cycling, the biggest danger on the road is simple:
Drivers often don’t see you.
That’s why visibility gear matters so much.
After more than 155,000 miles of riding, I’ve learned that the right gear makes a real difference in how drivers behave around you.
Cyclists benefit from tools that help them see traffic approaching from behind.
Garmin Varia Radar Tail Light
Drivers approaching from behind trigger a radar alert on your bike computer and the light brightens automatically when you slow down.
See Garmin Varia on Amazon
Helmet-Mounted Cycling Mirror
A small mirror lets you check traffic behind you without turning your head — something I’ve used on long rides for years.
See My Mirror
See cycling mirrors on Amazon
When I combine a radar tail light and a mirror, I always know when a car is coming before it reaches me.
Runners rely more on lighting and reflective gear to stay visible to drivers.
LED Running Safety Vest
Bright LED vests create a glowing outline around the runner so drivers can see them from far away.
See LED running vests on Amazon
Clip-On Running Lights
Small lights attach to clothing or shoes and dramatically improve nighttime visibility.
See running clip lights on Amazon
Visibility gear doesn’t make you invincible, but it dramatically increases the odds that drivers notice you early.
Runners face traffic so they can see danger coming. Cyclists ride with traffic because bikes follow vehicle rules and predictable movement helps drivers react safely.
Both approaches are built around the same idea:
Stay visible. Stay predictable. Stay alive.
This blog stays pop-up free thanks to small commissions from your link clicks. It never affects your price.
As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.
Last Updated: May 2026
Cycling gloves are one of the fastest-wearing pieces of cycling gear most riders own.
They absorb sweat, vibration, pressure on the handlebars, friction against bar tape, and constant use mile after mile.
That’s why I eventually stopped spending big money on premium gloves.
Over the years, I realized something surprising:
In my experience, glove comfort comes down more to:
Brand name alone doesn’t guarantee better long-distance comfort.
These are the gloves I personally ride with right now.
They’ve held up surprisingly well for the price, and the padding actually feels better to me than some premium gloves I’ve owned in the past.
This Quickest Answers post gives you the short version.
But if you want the full detailed explanation — including the exact gloves I use, why I stopped buying expensive gloves, gel vs foam padding thoughts, and what I’ve learned after 155,000+ miles — read the full article on The Old Guy Bicycle Blog:
Why I Choose Budget Cycling Gloves Over Expensive Ones (After 155,000+ Miles)
The detailed version includes real-world riding experience, long-distance comfort thoughts, and my honest take after decades on the bike.
This blog stays pop-up free thanks to small commissions from your link clicks. It never affects your price.
As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.
People love to debate this like it’s a contest: jogging is “better,” walking is “pointless,” and somebody is always wrong. The truth is simpler and more useful: Both work for weight loss. The real question is which one helps you stay consistent and stay in a calorie deficit.
If you want to lose weight, your body has to spend more energy than you take in. That’s the whole game. Jogging can help burn more. Walking can help burn more. But if your calorie intake rises with your activity, the scale won’t move.
Reality check: You can out-eat a jog just like you can out-eat a walk.
If weight loss is the goal, food logging is the simplest way to make the deficit real.
Jogging usually burns more calories per minute than walking. It also raises your heart rate faster and can feel more “workout-like,” which some people love.
Walking burns fewer calories per minute, but it’s easier on joints, easier to recover from, and easier to do daily. That matters because weight loss loves consistency.
In a perfect world where you do both consistently and eat the same amount, jogging usually causes faster weight loss because it burns more calories in the same time. But real life isn’t perfect.
Here’s what happens to a lot of people: they start jogging, get hungrier, eat more, and accidentally wipe out the deficit. Or they start walking, assume it “doesn’t do anything,” and stop before results show up. Food logging fixes both problems.
Affiliate note: If you buy through my links, I may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.
If you want the benefits of jogging without the injury and burnout risk, a hybrid approach works well:
Jogging can be better for faster weight loss because it burns more calories per minute. Walking can be better because it’s easier to do consistently and recover from. The winner is the one you’ll keep doing most days while staying in a calorie deficit.
Is jogging always better than walking for weight loss?
Not always. Jogging burns more calories per minute, but walking often wins long-term because it’s easier to sustain. If jogging causes injury or burnout, walking is the better option.
How often should I jog if I’m a beginner?
Many beginners do best with run/walk intervals 2–3 days a week and walking on the other days. Consistency matters more than intensity.
Why am I not losing weight even though I’m jogging?
The most common reason is calorie intake. Jogging can increase hunger and “earned” eating. Log food for 7–14 days. If the deficit is real, results follow.
Should I track steps if I’m walking for weight loss?
Steps can help with consistency, but the calorie deficit still matters most. If you want predictable results, tracking food is more powerful than chasing a step number.
This blog stays pop-up free thanks to small commissions from your link clicks. It never affects your price.
As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.
Walking is underrated. It’s easy on the joints, easy to recover from, and—done consistently—can absolutely drive fat loss. So here’s the direct answer: Yes—for many people, walking 30 minutes a day is enough to lose weight. But the part that decides everything is the part most people ignore: you still need a calorie deficit.
Walking burns fewer calories than running, but it’s often more sustainable—meaning people actually keep doing it. A rough estimate for many adults is 120–250 calories in 30 minutes, depending on body weight, pace, terrain, and whether there are hills.
The catch is simple: walking doesn’t “force” weight loss. It helps create the deficit—but food determines whether the deficit is real.
Weight loss happens when you burn more calories than you eat. Walking helps you burn more—so the deficit is easier—but it still comes down to what you do in the kitchen.
Simple rule: Walking is a great fat-loss tool, but it’s not a permission slip to eat anything.
If your calories stay too high, the scale won’t move—no matter how consistent you are.
If you’re walking daily and not losing weight, the most likely reason is calorie intake—not the walking. Food logging is the fastest way to remove the guesswork and make results predictable.
This is the same lesson cyclists learn: you can exercise consistently and still not lose weight if your calories stay too high. Logging food turns “I think I’m eating fine” into “I know exactly why this is working.”
Affiliate note: If you buy through my links, I may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.
If you pair daily walking with a modest calorie deficit, many people can lose weight steadily. The best approach is the one you can keep doing without burnout.
If you want more fat-loss effect from the same 30 minutes, you don’t need to turn it into misery. Small upgrades add up:
Yes—walking 30 minutes a day can be enough to lose weight. But it only works if it produces a consistent calorie deficit.
Is walking 30 minutes a day enough if I’m a beginner?
Yes. For many beginners, daily walking is one of the best ways to start losing weight because it’s sustainable and low-risk. You’ll get the best results if you pair it with a calorie deficit and simple food logging.
What if I’m walking every day but not losing weight?
The most common reason is calorie intake. Log your food for 7–14 days with honesty. If you’re not in a deficit, walking won’t force weight loss. If you are in a deficit, results follow.
Should I walk faster to lose more weight?
Faster can help, but the biggest driver is consistency. A brisk pace you can maintain daily is better than “hard walks” you only do for a week.
Is walking better than running for weight loss?
Running burns more calories per minute, but walking is easier to sustain and easier on the joints. The “best” choice is the one you can stick with while keeping your calorie intake in a deficit.
This blog stays pop-up free thanks to small commissions from your link clicks. It never affects your price.
As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.
This is one of those questions people ask because they want a simple yes/no. So here it is: Yes—for many people, running 30 minutes, 5 days a week is enough to lose weight. But the part most people skip is the part that decides everything: you have to be in a calorie deficit.
Running is one of the most effective cardio workouts for burning calories in a short amount of time. In rough terms, 30 minutes of running often burns somewhere in the neighborhood of 250–400 calories, depending on your body weight, pace, terrain, and fitness level.
But here’s the honest truth: running doesn’t override food. You can absolutely run five days a week and still not lose weight if your calorie intake stays too high.
Weight loss happens when you consistently burn more calories than you eat. That’s it. Running helps you burn more calories—but if you eat more than you burn, the scale won’t move.
Simple rule: You can run for fitness, but you eat for fat loss.
Running makes the deficit easier—but food decides whether it actually happens.
If your goal is weight loss, food logging is the fastest way to stop guessing and start getting predictable results. You don’t have to do it forever—but you do need it long enough to learn what your “normal” eating really adds up to.
A very common trap is thinking, “I ran today, so I’m good.” Then a coffee drink, a handful of trail mix, and a slightly bigger dinner quietly wipe out the entire run. Food logging stops that.
Affiliate note: If you buy through my links, I may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.
If you run 30 minutes, 5 days a week and maintain a modest calorie deficit, you can absolutely lose weight. Many people do best with a deficit that’s sustainable—not extreme.
You don’t have to run fast to lose weight. You don’t even have to run the whole time. A run/walk plan counts, and it often keeps people injury-free and consistent.
The best plan is the one you can do week after week. An injured runner burns zero calories.
Yes—running 30 minutes, 5 days a week can be enough to lose weight. But it only works if it produces a consistent calorie deficit.
Is 30 minutes of running enough if I’m a beginner?
For many beginners, yes. A consistent 30-minute run or run/walk session is enough to create a meaningful weekly calorie burn— as long as your food intake doesn’t rise to match it.
What if I’m not losing weight even though I’m running?
The most common reason is calorie intake. Start logging your food for 7–14 days with honesty. If the deficit is real, results follow. If the deficit isn’t real, running alone won’t force it.
Should I run faster to lose more weight?
Not necessarily. Faster can burn more calories, but it also raises injury risk and burnout. The best “fat loss pace” is the pace you can sustain five days a week.
Do I need strength training too?
You don’t need it to lose weight, but it helps you keep muscle while you lose fat. Even a simple routine a couple times a week can be a big upgrade.
This blog stays pop-up free thanks to small commissions from your link clicks. It never affects your price.
As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.
You’ve seen the photos: a lean cyclist with sharp abs and defined legs. So the obvious question is fair: can cycling actually give you abs like that?
The honest answer: cycling builds core strength—but visible abs are mostly a body-fat issue. Plenty of strong cyclists have great cores and still don’t have a visible six-pack. That doesn’t mean they’re “out of shape.”
Cycling works your core constantly. Your abs brace your torso, stabilize your hips, and keep you steady while you pedal. But most of that work is isometric—holding position—rather than big crunching movements that build thick “blocky” abs.
None of this gear “creates abs.” But these items make it easier to train consistently, recover well, and track progress—without guesswork.
Yes. Your abs and deep core muscles stabilize your torso and hips the entire ride—especially when you’re climbing, sprinting, or riding in the drops.
Mostly body fat and genetics. Two cyclists can be equally fit, but one stores more fat around the midsection and won’t show separation as easily.
Not necessarily. Many cyclists do better with core stability work (planks, dead bugs, anti-rotation work) plus a couple ab-focused moves like hanging knee raises or an ab wheel.
Sometimes—but it depends on how lean you’re trying to get. If you chase extreme leanness, many cyclists feel worse on the bike. A small deficit and smart fueling is the safer approach.
Under-eating and overtraining. It can wreck recovery, increase cravings, and make riding feel miserable—then consistency falls apart.