The VerdictMODERATE CONVICTION

A short, active warm-up does the job. Longer just tires you out, and sitting still afterward wastes it.

Before your next workout, do three to five minutes of the exact movement you're about to do, building the intensity up as you go. Then start straight away. Don't sit back down.

  1. The number that changed my mind: 17 minutes of warm-up worked exactly as well as 34, and the longer version just left players more tired before they started.
  2. What most people get wrong: warm-up programs don't prevent injuries because they're long. They prevent injuries because you repeat a short routine a few times a week for months.
  3. Start here: a few minutes of movement that looks like the thing you're about to do, performed right before you do it.

A warm-up is like warming a car engine on a cold morning. A minute or two and it runs smoothly. Letting it idle for fifteen more doesn't make it run better, it just burns fuel you wanted for the drive. And if you warm it up then leave it parked, it cools straight back down.

SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.

Warm-up Protocols: The Minimum Effective Dose

Your warm-up might be making you worse, and it's not because it's too short.

Conviction: Moderate

The Practical Takeaway

Practical warm-up steps

Before your next workout, spend three to five minutes doing the exact movement you're about to do, building the intensity up as you go. Then start straight away. Don't sit back down.

A short, specific ramp gets you warm and primed, which is the whole job. Sitting still afterward lets it fade before you've used it.

Takes under 5 minutes. No equipment needed.

Conviction

Verdict graphic
MODERATE

There is no single right number, so confidence depends on which question you're asking. The direction is solid; the exact minute-count is not.

Some active warm-up beats none for performanceHIGH
Active beats passive (heat is the mechanism)MOD-HIGH
Longer is not betterMODERATE
A hard primer helps explosive outputMODERATE
A primer helps enduranceDEBUNKED
Structured programs reduce injury (chronic)HIGH
A universal minimum-minute number existsINSUFFICIENT
What would change my mind: "longer is not better"
A multi-arm trial in regular gym-goers (men and women, ages 20 to 60) comparing 3, 8, and 15 minutes of active warm-up before both an explosive test and a heavy lift, with a fixed delay before the effort. If 3 minutes matched 15 on performance with less fatigue, the practical minimum drops sharply with high confidence. If short doses clearly underperformed in older or out-of-shape people, the dose becomes age-tiered rather than universal.
What would change my mind: "a primer doesn't help endurance"
A well-controlled, low-bias trial showing a real-world endurance time-trial improvement from a priming activity, replicated independently. The current meta-analysis pooled 35 studies and found nothing, with high risk of bias in the constituent trials, so a clean positive result would reopen the question.

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Sources

  1. Warm-up duration trial (2018). Influence of warm-up duration on physical performance and psychological perceptions in handball players. Res Sports Med. N=18; 17 min matched 34 min on performance, 34 min raised perceived load. PMID 29384020.
  2. Ribeiro B, et al. (2025). The effect of muscle warm-up on voluntary and evoked force-time parameters: SR and meta-analysis with meta-regression. J Sport Health Sci. Active warm-up improves muscle function; temperature and task specificity moderate it. PMID 39864808.
  3. Silva LM, et al. (2018). Effects of Warm-Up, Post-Warm-Up, and Re-Warm-Up Strategies on Explosive Efforts in Team Sports: A Systematic Review. Sports Med. 30 studies; benefit decays in the transition, re-warm-up restores it. PMID 29968230.
  4. PAPE endurance SR/MA (2024). No Evidence of Postactivation Performance Enhancement on Endurance Exercises. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 35 studies; no endurance benefit. PMID 37796168.
  5. PAPE optimization SR/MA (2025). Optimizing Post-activation Performance Enhancement in Athletic Tasks. Sports Med. Heterogeneous, GRADE certainty low. PMID 39853660.
  6. Barengo NC, et al. (2017). Effects of the FIFA 11 training program on injury prevention and performance in football players: SR and meta-analysis. Clin Rehabil. 11 trials, N=4700; injury RR 0.69. PMID 27811329.

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