How to exercise more when you are always saying you have no time

May 31, 2026by Mindcrate Team

If you “have no time,” you’re probably waiting for perfect time

I’ve said “I’m too busy” so many times it’s almost embarrassing. And honestly? Most of the time, I wasn’t actually out of time—I was out of willpower, energy, or a plan that didn’t feel annoying.

But here’s the annoying truth: you don’t need more time to exercise. You need a smaller target.
That’s it. That’s the whole game.

People picture exercise as a 60-minute workout, gym bag, playlist, shower, and a heroic personality. But real life is messy. Work bleeds into dinner. Kids need stuff. The couch is right there. So if exercise only “counts” when it looks perfect, you’ll keep skipping it.

I used to wait for the magical free hour. Spoiler: it never showed up.

Stop aiming for workouts. Start aiming for movement snacks

This is my strongest opinion: 30-minute workouts are nice, but 3-minute movement snacks are what save your week.

Movement snacks are tiny bursts of exercise you can actually squeeze in.

Think:

  • 10 squats while coffee brews
  • 1 brisk walk around the block
  • 15 pushups against a counter
  • 2 minutes of stretching before a shower
  • stairs instead of the elevator, twice a day

That doesn’t sound sexy. But neither does quitting because you’re waiting for the “right time.”

If you do 5 minutes a day, that’s 35 minutes a week.
If you do 10 minutes a day, that’s 70 minutes a week.
And if you do it consistently, you start becoming the person who moves, not the person who only thinks about moving.

Make exercise stupidly easy to start

The biggest lie we tell ourselves is that motivation comes first. It usually doesn’t. Action comes first, motivation follows.

So make the start tiny enough that your brain can’t argue.

Here’s the rule I love: make it so easy you feel slightly silly.

Examples:

  • Put on workout clothes first thing, even if you only walk for 5 minutes
  • Open the yoga mat and do 1 stretch
  • Do 5 squats before brushing your teeth
  • Walk for exactly 7 minutes after lunch

And yes, 7 minutes counts. I’m very serious about this. If “exercise” feels like a courtroom case, you’ve already lost.

The goal isn’t to impress anyone. The goal is to make starting feel almost automatic.

Attach exercise to something you already do

If you’re busy, the best habit hacks are the boring ones.

Habit stacking is basically sneaking exercise into an existing routine.

Try:

  • After you make coffee, do 10 calf raises
  • After you send your first work email, stand up and stretch for 60 seconds
  • After lunch, walk for 8 minutes
  • After dinner, do 1 short bodyweight circuit
  • Before bed, do 5 minutes of mobility

I’ve had way more success linking movement to habits I already do than trying to “find time” like it’s a lost sock.

And the beauty is, you don’t need to think. The cue is already there.

Use the “minimum viable workout” rule

Some days, you’ll have a full 20 or 30 minutes. Great.
But on chaotic days, you need a backup plan so small it feels almost too easy.

Here’s mine:

Minimum viable workout = 5 minutes, no excuses.

Pick one:

  • 20 squats
  • 10 pushups
  • 30-second plank x 3
  • 5-minute brisk walk
  • 1 song of dancing in your room like a maniac

If you do more, awesome. If you don’t, you still kept the chain alive.

That matters more than people think. Because skipping once is fine. But skipping enough times turns exercise into something you “used to do.”

Put exercise into your calendar like a real appointment

If it’s not scheduled, it’s basically imaginary.

I know that sounds strict, but it works. Treat exercise like a meeting you can’t casually move around for “someday.”

Try this:

  • Block 10 minutes three times a week
  • Put it on your calendar
  • Set a reminder 10 minutes before
  • Make it a recurring event

And don’t schedule it in fantasy land. If mornings are chaos, stop lying to yourself and choose lunch or evening. If evenings collapse under fatigue, do it earlier. Be honest about your actual life, not your ideal life.

That honesty is weirdly freeing.

Stop trying to be a person who “works out.” Be a person who moves

This shift helped me a lot. I stopped asking, “Did I work out today?” and started asking, “Did I move today?”

That includes:

  • Walking while on calls
  • Taking the stairs
  • Stretching between tasks
  • Standing for part of the day
  • Playing with your kids or pets like you mean it

Exercise doesn’t have to be all or nothing.
A busy life can still contain a lot of movement if you stop expecting it to look like a fitness ad.

And if you’re all-or-nothing by nature, that’s fine. But the all-or-nothing mindset is exactly what makes people quit. Tiny movement is not a consolation prize. It’s the strategy.

Build an “if-then” plan for your worst days

This is where people usually get stuck. They know what to do on good days. They have no idea what to do when work explodes, sleep is awful, and dinner is late.

So make a rule now.

Examples:

  • If I miss my morning workout, then I walk for 10 minutes after lunch.
  • If I’m too tired for a full routine, then I do 5 minutes only.
  • If I’m traveling, then I do bodyweight squats and a short walk.
  • If I feel resistance, then I start with 2 minutes.

This removes decision fatigue. And when you’re tired, decisions are the enemy.

Make it easier than scrolling

This one’s brutally simple: your environment should help you exercise, not sabotage you.

So:

  • Keep sneakers near the door
  • Leave a resistance band on your desk
  • Put a yoga mat where you can see it
  • Keep workout clothes ready the night before
  • Delete friction, add visibility

And maybe make scrolling slightly less tempting. I’m not saying throw your phone into the sea. I’m saying don’t pretend your phone isn’t stealing 17 minutes here and 11 minutes there.

Those little pockets of time? That’s where movement lives.

Use a habit tracker so you can see your wins

This part matters more than people admit. When exercise is tiny, it can feel invisible. A tracker makes it real.

Something as simple as checking off:

  • 5-minute walk
  • 10 squats
  • Stretching
  • Full workout
  • Any movement

That little checkmark gives your brain a hit of progress. And progress is addictive in the best way.

I like tracking because it turns “I’m failing” into “I’m building something.” Huge difference.

If you want a simple way to do that, Trider (myhabits.in) makes habit tracking feel way less annoying than trying to remember everything in your head.

Don’t let guilt become your fitness plan

Guilt is a terrible coach. It yells, shames, and burns people out.

So if you missed a few days, don’t do the whole dramatic restart ritual. No “Monday reset” speech. No punishing double workout. Just pick the smallest next action and do that.

Missed today? Walk 5 minutes tomorrow.
Missed this week? Do 2 minutes tonight.
Fell off for a month? Cool. Start again now.

Consistency is built by restarting fast. Not by being perfect.

A simple weekly plan for busy people

If you want something super practical, use this:

Monday: 10-minute walk
Tuesday: 5-minute strength circuit
Wednesday: rest or stretch for 5 minutes
Thursday: 10-minute walk
Friday: 5-minute bodyweight workout
Saturday: longer walk, bike ride, dance, anything fun
Sunday: reset, plan, and prep clothes

That’s it. Nothing fancy. Nothing Instagram-worthy. Just enough structure to stop the “no time” spiral.

The real fix: lower the bar and raise the frequency

If you’re always saying you have no time, don’t fight that reality. Work with it.

Lower the bar. Raise the frequency.
That’s how busy people actually get consistent.

Five minutes today beats zero minutes while waiting for the perfect week. And once movement becomes normal, you’ll often do more without forcing it.

So start small. Start ugly. Start before you feel ready.

And if you want help turning tiny actions into a real streak, try Trider and make the “I have no time” excuse a lot harder to believe.

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This article is a map.
Trider is the vehicle.

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