Overcoming Barriers to Physical Activity
Common Barriers to Physical Activity
Common barriers may keep you from being physically active. Common barriers include:
Lack of time
Lack of social support
Lack of energy or motivation
Lack of skill
Fear of injury
- Weather conditions
Keep reading to learn ways to overcome these barriers and make physical activity part of your day.
Lack of Time
- Monitor your daily activities for 1 week. Identify at least five 30-minute time slots you could use for physical activity.
- Add physical activity to your daily routine. For example, walk or ride your bike to work or shopping, walk the dog, or take the stairs.
- Organize school activities around physical activity.
- Choose activities, such as walking, jogging, or stair climbing that you can do based on the time that you have available, even for a few minutes.
- Use work physical activity facilities and programs.
- Hold walking meetings and conference calls if possible.
- During phone calls, try to stand, stretch, or move and walk.
Lack of Social Support
- Explain your interest in physical activity to friends and family. Ask them to support your efforts.
- Invite friends and family members to be physically active with you.
- Plan social activities involving physical activity.
- Develop new friendships with physically active people.
- Join a gym or group, such as the YMCA or a hiking club.
Lack of Energy or Motivation
- Schedule physical activity for times in the day or week when you feel energetic.
- Start slow and build to longer times or more intense activities.
- Make physical activity a regular part of your daily or weekly schedule and write it on your calendar.
- Invite a friend to exercise with you on a regular basis and write it on both your calendars.
- Join an exercise group or class.
Lack of Skill
- Select activities that don’t require new skills, such as walking, climbing stairs, or jogging.
- Take a class to develop new skills.
- Select activities that require minimal facilities or equipment, such as walking, jogging, jumping rope, or bodyweight exercises like pushups or squats. See What You Can Do to Meet Physical Activity Recommendations for examples of ways to be physically active.
- Look for inexpensive, convenient resources available in your community, such as park and worksite programs. See Places to Be Physically Active for more information.
Fear of Injury
- Learn how to warm up and cool down to prevent injury.
- Learn the best kinds exercises for your age, fitness level, skill level, and health status.
- Choose activities you feel you can do safely.
- Increase the amount you do gradually as your confidence and abilities grow.
Weather Conditions
- Develop a set of regular activities that are always available regardless of the weather, such as dance, indoor swimming, stair climbing, or mall walking.
- Or, bundle up, go outside, and have fun!