The 7-Minute Workout, Made Practical

Does the 7-minute workout actually work?

The original 7-minute High-Intensity Circuit Training (HICT) protocol, published by Klika and Jordan in 2013, produces meaningful cardiovascular and muscular stimulus in a short time by combining bodyweight exercises performed at high intensity with brief rest intervals. It works best as a minimum effective dose for time-constrained days — not as a complete fitness program. Evidence for HICT generally is moderate; evidence specifically for the 7-minute version is limited to the original mechanistic paper and small follow-up studies.

Brett Klika and Chris Jordan published the HICT protocol in 2013 in the ACSM’s Health & Fitness Journal, describing a 12-exercise circuit performed for 30 seconds each with 10-second transitions, targeting both aerobic and muscular fitness in under 10 minutes. The workout went viral partly because of the simplicity and partly because it requires no equipment. What the paper actually argues is that high-intensity circuit training at sufficient effort can produce many of the physiological benefits of longer conventional workouts — but the key word is sufficient: the 7 minutes only work if the effort is genuinely vigorous.

Practices

Master the core 12-exercise HICT circuit

The original protocol: 12 bodyweight exercises, 30 seconds each, 10-second rest between — done right, it is genuinely hard.

Understand that effort — not duration — is the active ingredient

A 7-minute workout at 50% effort produces little; the same 7 minutes at 90% effort produces a real training stimulus.

Do multiple rounds when fitness is the goal

The original paper recommends 2-3 rounds for a meaningful fitness stimulus — one circuit is a floor, not a ceiling.

Use the protocol’s portability as its primary advantage

The 7-minute workout’s real superpower is that it can be done anywhere — use this to maintain training during travel and disrupted routines.

Progress the workout without extending the time

Increase difficulty by harder exercise variations, more reps per interval, and reduced rest — not by adding minutes.

Use the 7-minute workout as a morning activation, not just a fitness tool

Seven minutes of vigorous movement at the start of the day primes the nervous system for focus and decision-making before the first meeting.

Practice this with IX Coach

Reading about a practice changes nothing on its own. IX Coach turns these into a guided, adaptive routine — discerning where you are in real time and walking the practice with you, session after session.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach: 7 days free, then $40/month (about $1.30/day).