15 Ways to Find 15 Minutes for Exercise--Every Day

Is there time in your daily schedule to work out? Is there time in your daily schedule to work out?The secret to finding time for a workout is really about one simple strategy: ditching the stuff that's wasting your valuable time. Here are 15 easy ways to shave 15 extra minutes out of your day--and put them toward your fitness goals.

1. LOG OFF FACEBOOK People average seven hours a month on the social site. Do the math and it works out to 105 minutes each week, or 15 minutes every single day. You don't have to banish FB, but limit it to two short sessions a day.

2. SAY NO!
When someone (not your boss) asks you to do something you don't have time for, say, "I'm sorry, I can't"--and feel the freedom wash over you.

3. PLAN YOUR DAY Schedule your biggest task of the day for when you're most focused and productive. You'll get it done more quickly than if you try to tackle it during a natural low point.

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4. RESIST MULTITASKING Trying to do too many things at once often means getting nothing done. Pick an item from your to-do list, and do it and only it. Each task will get done faster when it gets your full attention.

5. RECORD YOUR SHOWS
An hour-long TV show contains just 40 to 42 minutes of real content--the rest is commercials. Invest in a digital TV recorder so you can free up time to pursue more healthful activities, like 15-minute workouts.

6. DON'T BE A NEATNIK Is it really all that important that your apartment is spotless? Stop wasting precious potential gym time polishing picture frames.

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7. BUY TIME Pay for services that suck up tons of time. Before you pooh-pooh the idea of hiring a cleaning service, sit down and do a little math. When you think of the few hundred bucks you blew on shoes and all the time you've spent scrubbing the tub, you may want to reconsider your expenditures.

8. PUT IT IN INK
You find time for everything on your calendar because it's there in black and white. Block out your workouts as you would work appointments.

9. SET A TIMER All the little things you plan to do for just a few minutes--surfing the Web, cleaning the fridge--can suck away hours. Keep a kitchen timer nearby. When you start a task, set it for 15 minutes. Then stop when the bell rings.

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10. TOUCH IT ONCE
When a paper comes across your desk or an e-mail hits your inbox, deal with it right away. Piled-up paper and messages create distracting clutter, and you waste time revisiting each issue again (and again).

11. PICK UP THE PHONE It can take 15 e-mails or texts to accomplish what you could do in a 40-second phone call.

12. BE DECISIVE You can easily waste hours choosing what color to paint your walls or which brand of sneakers to buy (it's called analysis paralysis). At some point, you need to stop waffling and move forward. Set a time limit, say 45 minutes, for comparison shopping, weighing pros and cons, etc., then make a decision and go forth.

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13. PUT THINGS IN THEIR PLACE I used to waste precious time looking for my keys. At any given time they could have been anywhere-pockets, drawers, purses, or my personal favorite, hanging from the door lock. Finally, I bought a 75-cent hook, hung it by the phone as my designated key spot, and have not lost my keys since. Try this trick with anything you lose regularly. It works.

14. SET OUT YOUR STUFF
Setting out your exercise clothes at night makes it far more likely that you will get up and get moving for a morning workout, instead of hitting snooze (or worse, skipping the whole affair entirely) because it's too daunting to get up and start rummaging around for your workout gear.

15. GET UP 15 MINUTES EARLIER
Vow to work out at 5 a.m. every day and you'll never do it. But even the most nocturnal of night owls can roll out of the sack a mere 15 minutes earlier in the morning. Even if you don't use that extra time for your workout, you'll get to the office earlier than usual, so you'll be more likely to take that 15 minutes for yourself later in the day.

If Your Motivation Goes Missing. . .

TELL US: What are your tricks for keeping up on your workouts?


More from Women's Health:

100 Best Things You Can Do for Your Body

Easy, Healthy Breakfasts: 5 New Ideas

7 Pains You Should Never Ignore



An entire set of genius 15-minute workouts, a fat-fighting food plan, and more--all in one book. Buy The Women's Health Big Book of 15-Minute Workouts.







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148 comments

  • Crystal  •  2 months ago
    i just wasted 5minutes reading this.
  • Terry  •  2 months ago
    I just wasted 3 minutes reading this and 1 minute writing this comment. no workout for me today......
  • A Yahoo! User  •  2 months ago
    I m a beautiful lady, just wanna to make more friends, recently I joined a amazing site..check my name dear ....It is a person'als place where you can meet success'ful rich men, classy mature women, rich women looking for marriage, or just meet beautiful friends and singles. Good luck! :)
    The Super Bowl belongs back to New Orleans!!!!!!!!!!!54214135615
  • MaxHedonist  •  2 months ago
    House work IS a workout in itself!
  • M  •  2 months ago
    As a trainer, when I get "de-motivated" clients (those who are not regular exercisers and seem to be looking for excuses before we're even through with our first consultation), my first assignment is to keep a time journal for a few days. An HONEST time journal, documenting every moment. Very few of us are not wasting at least 15 minutes a day that, when used in an effective manner, would be enough to get on the path to better health. Shave 15 minutes off TV time (if you have a DVR, you can record your favorite shows and watch them in half the time by skipping commericals), get up 15 minutes earlier, throw your hair up in the occasional pony instead of washing and styling it every morning, cook several meals one day of the week so you are not working from scratch every night; there is always somewhere you can gain a few moments a day. "No time" is a poor excuse, especially if you've had time to read crappy news articles on Yahoo! ;-)
  • Jeffrey H  •  2 months ago
    If it's something that you really want to do you would find the time, no matter what!
  • Tara  •  2 months ago
    These articles are nice, but bottom line if someone doesn't like to workout they will never "have time". It is easy to find excuses not to do something that you are trying to force yourself to do. I am lucky because I love athletics - it is easy to find time because it is a priority, simple as that.
  • baaam  •  2 months ago
    I think Nike said it best...
  • Someone  •  2 months ago
    You can exercise in front of your TV every night...plus there are no gym fees.
  • AW  •  2 months ago
    In my opinion, mentally initiaiting yourself to do something is 95% of the battle, whether you're going to work out, start a project or commit towards self-improvement in some manner. You have to mentally fire yourself up if you want to do something that is against the grain of your being.
  • Diane  •  2 months ago
    If you want to exercise for an hour, but only have 10 minutes to do so, then use that 10 minutes. Don't just give up completely! 10 minutes is better than ZERO minutes. Don't feel guilty that you can't spend the hour, but instead feel proud of the 10 minutes you did exersize!
  • On Top.  •  2 months ago
    You have to eat and you find time to shop or dine, you have to poop so you find time drop your drawers, you have to bath so you find time, ..if you want to live longer in order to eat , poop and bath you'll find time to make exercise a priority. ............. Exercise every day and when you turn 60 your non exercising 40 year old friends will be eating their hearts out.
  • masez34  •  2 months ago
    I have to make a change, A BIG one, and I see it happening very soon....
  • T J B  •  2 months ago
    The latest research on learning shows that if you do something 30 days in a row the pathways in your brain become established toward that and you get into a "rut". Obviously, if that pattern is inactivity, the rut is a bad one. If the pattern is thirty days of exercise, the rut is a good one. Also, I don't believe in motivation. Motivations are feelings, and exercise is an action. It only gets done when you stand up and walk out the door. Waiting for the right 'mindset' is just another form of procrastination. There is no "secret answer". Like Nike says: "JUST DO IT".
  • barbroxursox  •  2 months ago
    i'm not gonna pay someone to do housework i can do myself -__-
  • mimi  •  2 months ago
    Stop wasting time on yahoo....
  • Amore  •  2 months ago
    what gets me to the gym 4 x a week is the sheer determination. I make it a part of my lifestyle. On days i dont feel like working out, i tell myself "Just Do It". Switch off my brain and drive to the gym. Before i know it, i am already getting into the rhythm and enjoy my work out! :)
  • STEVE  •  2 months ago
    Stop reading Yahoo News
  • Malenurse  •  2 months ago
    i don't consider relaxing Wasting time, i find it very therapeutic 2 kids, 60 plus hours a week at work if i get 15 minutes to myself i will take even if i have to hide in my truck
  • Kathy  •  2 months ago
    Clean house means I can focus on working out! Duh!!!!!! And bonus points are earned! I get up early, facebook and search the web while drinking coffee. Don't want to work out before I'm fully awake, might fall off the eliptical or drop a weight on my foot. Then I work out, then I go to work. Housework is done each day so it does not pile up. Granted, my kids are grown and out of the house and man is not too messy? I like to work out in the morning so my day goes better. FYI, I used to be a night owl but am a morning person as of 7 years ago. Best you can do is WHAT you can do. As long as you feel good and not cheated all is well
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