When Is the Best Time to Train? A Bodybuilder’s Guide

When Is the Best Time to Train? A Bodybuilder’s Guide

Why you train is incredibly important. So is how you train. What do you train? Everything, of course. Where you train also matters.

But what about when you train?

The time of day you train can affect your energy, focus, strength output, recovery, sleep, and overall consistency.

So let’s break it down by time of day so you can stop guessing—and start dominating.

The Early Morning (4 AM – 8 AM)

The early bird gets the worm…or the gainz?

Pros:

  • Workout’s done before the day begins—no excuses, no distractions.
  • Quiet environment and a clean mental slate.
  • Great for disciplined early risers and 9–5 lifers.
  • Builds consistency and routine fast.

Cons:

  • You’re colder, stiffer, and not fully awake—warm-ups become extra important.
  • Tough to eat and digest pre-workout meals on a tight schedule.
  • Going too hard too early can leave you drained later in the day.

Bottom Line:

A solid option for disciplined lifters. Just warm up thoroughly, fuel properly, and don’t sprint out of the gate half asleep.

Mid to Late Morning (8 AM – 12 PM)

Peak brainpower meets peak readiness.

Pros:

  • Mental sharpness and focus tend to be high.
  • You’ve had time to wake up, move around, and fuel up.
  • Strong balance of physical performance and mental clarity.
  • Great environment for high-quality training.

Cons:

  • Not realistic for many work schedules.
  • May compete with work, business, or family responsibilities.

Bottom Line:

One of the best times to train if your lifestyle allows it. High focus, strong energy, and solid recovery potential.

Early to Mid Afternoon (12 PM – 4 PM)

This is the trickiest training window for many people.

Cons:

  • Post-lunch sluggishness can hit hard.
  • Energy and motivation may dip.
  • Busy schedules can make consistency difficult.

Pros:

  • Body temperature and mobility are usually in a good place.
  • Can work very well with proper nutrition and hydration.
  • A short walk, caffeine, or quick reset can completely change the session.
  • Still far better than skipping training altogether.

Bottom Line:

Not the strongest time for everyone, but absolutely workable. If this is your available window, own it and make it productive.

The Evening Prime (4 PM – 8 PM)

This is where performance peaks for a lot of lifters.

Pros:

  • Core body temperature is highest—often improving strength, mobility, and performance.
  • You’re fully awake, fueled, and physically ready.
  • Great outlet for stress after work or school.
  • Many people hit their best lifts during this window.

Cons:

  • Easy to skip if the day wears you down.
  • Commercial gyms can become absolute war zones.
  • Busy schedules and errands can interfere.

Bottom Line:

Neck-and-neck with mid-morning as one of the best training windows. A fantastic blend of readiness, strength, and performance.

The Late Night (8 PM – 12 AM)

The night owl special.

Pros:

  • Quiet, uninterrupted gym sessions.
  • Can feel peaceful after a hectic day.
  • Some people genuinely feel mentally sharp at night.

Cons:

  • Heavy training too close to bedtime can make it difficult to wind down.
  • Poor sleep hurts recovery, hormones, mood, and performance.
  • Nutrition timing can become awkward late at night.

Bottom Line:

Not ideal for most people, but workable for true night owls. Just protect your sleep like your gains depend on it—because they do.

The Overnight (12 AM – 4 AM)

Now we’re entering goblin territory.

Cons:

  • Disrupts natural circadian rhythm.
  • Recovery, mood, hormone balance, and long-term performance can suffer.
  • Difficult to maintain socially and mentally long-term.
  • Usually connected to poor sleep quality and inconsistent recovery.

Only Exception:

Graveyard-shift workers with no realistic alternative.

Bottom Line:

Unless your lifestyle absolutely demands it, skip it and get your damn sleep.

Quick Reference Chart

Time SlotRatingKey Points
4–8 AMSolidGreat discipline, requires longer warm-up
8 AM–12 PMEliteHigh focus and strong performance potential
12–4 PMTrickyAfternoon slump can interfere
4–8 PMEliteStrength and readiness often peak
8 PM–12 AMRiskyCan interfere with sleep and recovery
12–4 AMAvoid (if possible)Disrupts recovery and circadian rhythm

Final Word: What’s the Best Time to Train?

Truth is, the best time to train is the time you can train consistently.

But if you want to stack the deck in your favor?

  • Top Tier: 8 AM–12 PM and 4–8 PM
  • Solid: 4–8 AM
  • Workable: 12–4 PM
  • Less Ideal: 8 PM–12 AM
  • Avoid if Possible: 12–4 AM

If your schedule locks you into a less-than-optimal training window, don’t whine.

Adapt. Adjust. Dominate.

No perfect timing will save you from inconsistency.

Choose your battle time—and bring the war hammer.

Sunday Sendoff #48: Do the Right Thing

Brickwall's Sunday Sendoff

I broke a couple things recently that weren’t mine.

Sure, I felt bad about it.

But stuff happens. That’s just life.

And when stuff happens? Do the right thing.

In this case, that meant leaving a note, explaining what happened, and apologizing.

I couldn’t fix or replace the stuff I broke. But I could own it and apologize.

Could I have swept it under the rug? Avoided accountability? Blamed someone else?

I could’ve.

But that’s not only a disservice to the other person—it’s a disservice to yourself.

Because what are you telling yourself in that moment?

That’s the biggest thing.

Are you the type of person who takes responsibility and owns things?

Or the type of person who hides things, blames others, and avoids responsibility?

Integrity matters most when nobody’s forcing you to have it.

Guiding Principle

When stuff happens, do the right thing.

Something to Ponder

When stuff happens, what do you default to? Do you own it? Or do you look for a way out of responsibility?

See You In the Arena

This week is just about over. Next week is just about here. Let’s keep building.

Brick by brick.

Sonny the Alien: The Flirt

Sonny the Alien

Earth Log Entry #20: Sweet Talkin’

Sonny and Vanessa went to a local coffee shop on a Saturday morning for coffee.

They stood in line waiting to order.

Sonny studied the menu overhead. “Why are there so many different varieties of this beverage made from coffee beans?”

Vanessa scanned the crowded coffee shop. “Because people love their caffeine.”

Sonny looked at her. “Do they not know it’s an insecticide?”

Vanessa stared at him for a moment. “You’re an insecticide.”

It was their turn to order. Vanessa smiled at the barista. “Hi Dane! I’ll have the mocha Frappuccino.”

Sonny cleared his throat. “I’ll have a plain black coffee.”

The barista tapped on his POS system. “That’ll be $14.68.”

Sonny slowly pulled out his wallet and paid. “…Steep.” He muttered.

The barista chuckled and handed them the receipt. “They’ll be right up on the counter over there.” He gestured to the left.

Vanessa smiled brightly. “Thanks Dane!”

They made their way to the pickup counter.

Vanessa handed Sonny her purse. “I’m gonna run to the bathroom. I’ll be right back.”

Sonny nodded once and took the purse. “I will guard it.”

Vanessa smirked. “I know you will.”

She walked away.

Sonny stood at attention near the counter, holding Vanessa’s purse with both hands like a security detail guarding nuclear launch codes.

A woman approached and grabbed her drink.

She glanced over at Sonny and smiled. “Cute purse. I have the same one.”

Sonny looked down at it. “It is not mine, it is—”

The woman winked. “It’s okay. Your secret is safe with me.”

Sonny blinked. “…What secret?”

The woman extended her hand. “I’m Krystal.”

Sonny shook it firmly. “Sonny.”

Krystal laughed. “Sonny? That’s my friend’s dog’s name!”

Sonny smirked slightly. “Your friend has excellent taste in names.”

Krystal took another sip of her coffee. “You’re cute.”

Sonny crossed his arms. “I do not believe ‘cute’ is the correct descriptive term.”

Krystal grinned. “Oh my God, you’re funny too.”

She began digging through her purse. “Can I give you my number?”

Sonny cocked his head to the side. “…For what purpose?”

Krystal laughed harder. “You’re silly.”

She pulled out a pen and started writing on a scrap of receipt paper.

At that exact moment, Vanessa returned.

She slowed as she approached. “…Who’s this?”

Sonny immediately handed Vanessa her purse. “Vanessa, this is Krystal. She is attempting to give me her telephone number for unknown reasons.”

Vanessa looked at Krystal. “Oh, really?”

Krystal awkwardly lowered the pen.

Vanessa slid her arm around Sonny tightly. “Sorry, honey. He’s taken.”

Krystal’s eyes widened. “Oh my God—I’m sorry, I didn’t know.”

Vanessa smiled. “It’s okay.”

Krystal quickly shoved the pen back into her purse. “Well…nice meeting you.”

Then she scurried away toward the exit. They watched her leave.

Vanessa looked up at Sonny. “So.”

Sonny blinked. “So?”

Vanessa crossed her arms. “You’re getting girls’ numbers while I’m in the bathroom now, Casanova?”

Sonny shrugged calmly. “I did not realize she was evaluating me as a potential mate.”

Vanessa rolled her eyes. “Mmmhmm.”

The barista called out from behind the counter. “Drinks for Sonny!”

They grabbed their coffees and headed toward the door.

Sonny pulled out his Earth Log device and began typing.

Wear a Wrist Watch

There’s a moment when a man gets asked:

“What time is it?”

And in that moment—he either pulls out a glowing rectangle out of reflex…

Or he turns his wrist like a forged, focused, mission-driven man.

Why It Still Matters

Back in the day, men wore watches.

The wristwatch wasn’t just a timepiece—it was a tool.

A signal.

A quiet reminder:

I’m prepared. I’m present. I’m moving with purpose.

The Ethos

We don’t reach for distraction every time we need the hour.

We stay locked in.

To the mission. To life.

Your watch is more than something strapped to your wrist.

It’s your timekeeper. Your tempo. Your reminder.

The clock is ticking—and the time is now.

Why Wear One?

Discipline: A visible watch keeps you aware of time—essential for training, recovery, and execution.

Style: A solid timepiece elevates your fit. Minimal. Masculine. Timeless.

Efficiency: You glance. You know. You go.

Presence: Keeps you off your phone and in the real world.

What Kind of Watch?

Go with something that works for your life.

Analog or digital—both work, as long as it’s clean and functional.

No smart tech. You don’t need notifications on your wrist. You need time and presence.

Stick with timeless colors: black, grey, silver, gold.

And don’t spend a fortune. You can get a solid watch for under $30. Under $20 is even better.

Final Word

When someone asks for the time, don’t reach for distraction.

Look at your wrist.

Stay present.

Wear a wrist watch.

Sunday Sendoff #47: The Standard She Set

Brickwall's Sunday Sendoff

Mother’s Day.

And if you’re like most people, you probably don’t say enough about what your mom actually did for you.

You probably can’t.

It’s not just the big things.

It’s the everyday things.

The rides. The meals. The patience. The discipline. The sacrifices you didn’t even see at the time.

She showed up. Over and over again.

Even when she was tired. Even when life was hitting her too. Even when she didn’t feel like it.

That’s the part people overlook.

It wasn’t perfect. It wasn’t always pretty.

But it was consistent.

And that consistency?

That’s what built you.

Whether you realize it or not, a lot of who you are came from her.

The way you handle pressure. The way you treat people. The way you keep going when things get hard.

That didn’t come out of nowhere.

That came from watching her. Learning from her.

Sometimes without even knowing it.

And maybe you didn’t appreciate it then.

Most of us didn’t.

But you see it now.

Here’s the reality:

Not everyone gets that.

Some people lost their mom. Some never had that kind of presence. Some are still trying to make peace with what they got.

So if you’ve got a mom who showed up for you—however imperfectly—you’re ahead of the game.

Don’t take that for granted.

Tell her you appreciate her. Show her.

And if you’re a dad?

Understand this:

You’re setting that same standard now.

Your kids are watching you the same way you watched her. They’re learning what consistency looks like. What sacrifice looks like. What showing up looks like.

That’s the job.

That’s the legacy.

Guiding Principle

Consistency builds people. The standard you set today becomes someone else’s foundation tomorrow.

Something to Ponder

Who showed up for you when it mattered—and have you ever really acknowledged it?

See You In the Arena

This week is just about over. Next week is just about here. Let’s keep building.

Brick by brick.

Sonny the Alien: The Door

Sonny the Alien

Earth Log Entry #19: Broken Portal

Sonny went through the apartment building front entrance. The door shut behind him.

THUD.

He froze. “…That is unusual.”

He turned, opened the door again, and shut it.

THUD.

No click.

He tried again.

THUD.

Sonny stepped closer. Slowly.

He pressed his ear against the door.

Silence.

He pushed it lightly.

It drifted open.

Sonny stepped back, arms folding, one hand on his chin. “…Building security has been severely compromised.”

He vaulted up the stairs to the apartment. Chad sat on the couch watching TV.

Sonny set his backpack down and began removing his shoes. “Chad. Building security is compromised. The front entrance is not locking. We must initiate emergency repair procedures.”

Chad glanced over. “Uh…isn’t that what building maintenance is for?”

Sonny walked to the closet. “It is all our duty.”

Chad turned back to the TV. “I promise you, it is absolutely not.”

Sonny pulled out a tool bag and stood at the door. “Then whose duty is it?”

Chad flipped the channel. “Like I said—maintenance. They even have an app.”

Sonny paused. “…An app.”

He slowly began putting his shoes back on. “That could take days.”

Chad grabbed his chocolate milk and took a swig. “You’re taking this way too seriously. What are the chances anything happens?”

Sonny stopped. Looked over. “It is a chance I am not willing to take.”

Sonny returned to the entrance. He set the tool bag down.

He removed:

  • A hammer
  • A wrench
  • A kettlebell

He stared at the door.

Then knocked on it.

Once. Twice. Then harder.

THUD. THUD. THUD.

Another resident walking by slowed down. “…Everything good?”

Sonny didn’t look at him. “Testing structural integrity.”

The man blinked. “…Right.” And kept walking.

Ten minutes later—

Sonny wiped his hands.

He closed the door.

Click.

He froze.

Opened it.

Closed it again.

Click.

He stepped back. “…Mission accomplished.”

Sonny returned to the apartment. Chad was half asleep on the couch.

He set the tool bag down. “Safety has been restored. The door has been repaired.”

Chad didn’t look up. “Good job, Mr. Fix-It.”

Sonny allowed himself a small smirk. “Mr. Fix-It, indeed.”

Sonny pulled out his Earth Log device and began typing.

Nothing Is Static

Things may look static in the moment.

But what you’re really seeing is a slice of time.

Nothing stays still. It only moves slowly enough to fool you.

Kids grow. People change. Relationships shift. Opportunities open…and close.

You don’t wake up one day “behind.” You drift there by standing still.

The world is moving whether you are or not.

So you need to change.

Not frantically. Not reactively.

Intentionally.

Because the only real choice is direction, not just motion.

Failure as Flow, Not Finality

You are not separate from your failures. They’re part of your journey, not detours.

You need them. Failure teaches what success never will…what doesn’t work.

Accept.

Learn.

Adapt.

Grow.

Build.

No one in human history has avoided failure. No one was ever only successful.

You’re no different.

The question is what you do next.

Hide?

Or use failure as fuel and forge forward?

Your choice.