Exercise is one of the most powerful tools for managing diabetes and protecting cardiovascular health. Yet for many people with diabetes — particularly those on insulin or sulfonylureas — the fear of hypoglycaemia during or after exercise is a genuine barrier to physical activity. Understanding how different types of exercise affect blood glucose allows you to train safely and confidently.
How Exercise Affects Blood Glucose
The relationship between exercise and blood glucose is complex and depends on the type, intensity, and duration of activity. Aerobic exercise (moderate-intensity, sustained cardio) generally lowers blood glucose by increasing glucose uptake in muscle cells — an insulin-independent process mediated by GLUT4 transporters. This effect can persist for 24–48 hours after exercise, increasing the risk of delayed hypoglycaemia.
High-intensity interval training (HIIT) and resistance training can actually cause a transient rise in blood glucose due to the release of counter-regulatory hormones (adrenaline, cortisol, glucagon) that stimulate hepatic glucose production. This makes them potentially safer for those prone to exercise-induced hypoglycaemia.
The Safest Cardio Approaches for People with Diabetes
| Exercise Type | Glucose Effect | Hypo Risk | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brisk walking | Gradual decrease | Low–moderate | Beginners, daily activity |
| Swimming | Gradual decrease | Moderate | Joint problems, all-body cardio |
| Cycling (steady) | Gradual decrease | Moderate | Cardiovascular fitness |
| HIIT | Initial rise, then fall | Lower during; higher after | Time-efficient, insulin users |
| Resistance training | Initial rise | Low during session | Muscle preservation, insulin sensitivity |
- Check blood glucose before exercise: aim for 7–10 mmol/L (126–180 mg/dL) before starting
- If below 5 mmol/L (90 mg/dL), have 15–30g of fast-acting carbohydrates before exercising
- Reduce basal insulin by 20–50% for prolonged aerobic exercise (discuss with your team)
- Carry fast-acting glucose (glucose tablets, gel) during every session
- Check blood glucose after exercise and before bed — delayed hypos are common
- Use a CGM if available — real-time glucose data transforms exercise safety
A Practical 4-Week Cardio Starter Plan
Week 1–2: 3 × 20-minute brisk walks per week. Check glucose before and after each session. Note your glucose response pattern.
Week 3–4: Increase to 4 × 30-minute sessions. Consider adding 5-minute HIIT intervals (30 seconds fast, 90 seconds recovery) to reduce hypo risk during longer sessions.
Ongoing: Work towards 150 minutes of moderate aerobic activity per week, as recommended by the ADA. Add 2 resistance training sessions per week for optimal metabolic benefit.
Exercise is safe and highly beneficial for people with diabetes when approached with the right preparation. Understanding how different exercise types affect your blood glucose, checking levels before and after activity, and carrying fast-acting glucose are the foundations of safe exercise. Start gradually, monitor your response, and build confidence over time.

