If your heart rate spikes during a heavy set of squats, it’s tempting to think that counts as cardio. Hard effort, elevated heart rate, sweating — sounds close enough, right? Not quite.
Cardio and strength training both challenge your body, but they deliver different results. Cardio improves how your body takes in and uses oxygen over time — think endurance, VO2 max, and cardiovascular efficiency. Strength training builds muscle, develops force, and increases your physical capacity under load. Both are real work. Both matter. But they are not the same thing.
A demanding lifting session can absolutely get your heart pounding. That intensity is real and it’s worth something. But the primary training stimulus during a heavy set is still mechanical tension on the muscle — not sustained cardiovascular output. Your body responds to each signal differently, no matter how hard you’re breathing.
This is where a lot of training programs quietly break down. People lift hard and assume that covers their cardio. They run or cycle and assume that handles their strength needs. Progress stalls and it’s hard to figure out why — because both boxes feel like they’re being checked when really neither is being fully trained.
The fix isn’t complicated. Use both, and use them intentionally. Cardio builds the engine. Strength training builds the machine. You need both working well to perform, feel good, and stay healthy for the long haul.
So push hard on your squats. Chase that intensity. Just don’t let a high heart rate convince you that you’ve checked the cardio box too. Your body deserves a complete training plan — not a shortcut built on a misunderstanding.
Work Hard. Live Fit.