If belly fat were easy to lose, the internet would have a lot less content and a lot more people in flat-stomach peace. But here you are, having done the crunches, cut the carbs and questioned your entire relationship with food — and that same section of your body remains completely unbothered.
Here’s what most of the advice gets wrong: belly fat, particularly visceral fat stored around the midsection, doesn’t respond to targeted exercises alone. You cannot crunch your way out of it. What actually moves the needle is a combination of workouts that reduce overall body fat, manage cortisol and build the kind of muscle that keeps your metabolism working even when you aren’t. These five do exactly that.
HIIT: the workout that keeps burning after you stop
High-intensity interval training works by alternating short bursts of maximum effort with brief recovery periods. What makes it particularly effective for belly fat is the afterburn effect — the body continues burning calories at an elevated rate for hours after the session ends. Twenty to 30 minutes of HIIT can outperform a much longer moderate workout in terms of fat reduction, which is genuinely good news for people with limited time and unlimited frustration.
Three sessions a week is enough to see meaningful results. The key is actual intensity during the work intervals — not sort-of-hard, but genuinely hard.
Strength training: the long game that wins
Muscle burns more calories at rest than fat does, which means building lean muscle raises your baseline metabolic rate around the clock. Compound movements — squats, deadlifts, rows, presses — recruit multiple muscle groups simultaneously and trigger the kind of hormonal response that supports fat loss more effectively than isolation exercises.
Two to three strength sessions per week is a sustainable starting point. Results take longer to appear than with cardio-heavy approaches, but they tend to last longer too. Belly fat responds particularly well to consistent strength training combined with adequate protein intake.
Running and cardio: still worth doing, just not how you think
Steady-state cardio gets dismissed a lot in modern fitness spaces, but it remains one of the most effective tools for reducing overall body fat — including the visceral kind. The key adjustment for people who have already tried everything is varying the intensity. Alternating between easy runs and harder effort days prevents the body from adapting and plateauing, which is usually what’s happening when running stops producing results.
Aim for three to four sessions per week, mixing longer easy efforts with shorter, faster ones. And no, the treadmill counts.
Core exercises: not for spot reduction, but still essential
To be direct about something the fitness industry underplays: core exercises do not burn belly fat directly. Planks and ab work strengthen and define the muscles underneath, but the fat on top responds to overall energy deficit, not targeted effort. That said, a strong core improves posture, supports every other workout on this list and reduces the lower back strain that stops a lot of people from training consistently in the first place.
Two to three core-focused sessions per week, treated as support work rather than the main event, is the right framing.
Walking: the underrated one that actually compounds
Walking gets overlooked because it doesn’t feel like enough — but the research on low-intensity steady-state movement and visceral fat reduction is surprisingly strong. A brisk 30 to 45-minute walk daily adds up to significant caloric output over a week without spiking cortisol the way intense training can. Elevated cortisol, particularly from chronic overtraining, actively encourages the body to store fat around the midsection. Walking works with your stress hormones instead of against them.
For anyone who has been pushing hard for months with minimal results, adding daily walks while dialing back intensity slightly can genuinely shift things. It sounds too simple. It isn’t.
The honest truth about stubborn belly fat is that it responds to consistency, stress management and sleep as much as it responds to any specific workout. The five on this list are not a guaranteed fix. They are, however, the most evidence-backed tools available — and unlike the waist trainer, they actually do something.

