Hotel Room Workouts – How I Got Fit While Travelling

an on treadmill

Here’s the thing: I adore travelling, but my body does not adore the constant disruption. Every time I get into a routine at home, I’m off again. New country, new timezone, new hotel bed. And when you’re living out of a suitcase, let’s be honest, “gym membership” is about as realistic as “fluent in Mandarin by Tuesday.” For years, staying fit while travelling felt like a losing battle. But recently, thanks to working with my personal trainer (the endlessly patient Sam Keen), I’ve discovered the secret weapon that finally keeps me consistent: hotel room workouts.

The beauty? No fancy equipment, no awkward hotel gym encounters with the guy who grunts like he’s birthing an elephant, and no excuses. Just me, a bit of floor space, and Sam’s voice in my head telling me I’ve got two more push-ups in me even when I’m swearing otherwise. And honestly? It’s been a game-changer, not just for my waistline, but for proving to myself that I can stay fit on the road, one burpee at a time.

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Why Hotel Room Workouts Are a Traveller’s Best Friend

When you’re constantly on the move, the idea of “fitness” usually involves hauling your suitcase up three flights of stairs because the lift is broken, or sprinting through an airport because your gate is always the one furthest away. But here’s why hotel room workouts beat all that chaos:

  • Zero excuses. The gym might be closed, it might not exist, or it might cost more than your entire night’s stay. Your hotel room, however, is open 24/7.
  • Privacy. Nobody’s watching you sweat, except maybe the maid who walked in mid-plank (true story: but still better than the one that walked in on me in the shower!).
  • Budget-friendly. Save your cash for local food adventures instead of a 20€ day pass to a gym that smells like damp socks.
  • Flexibility. Ten minutes before your morning meeting? Done. Midnight after one too many tapas? Still doable.
  • Consistency. The single most underrated part of staying fit is just showing up. And when the gym is literally the two square metres next to your bed, showing up gets a whole lot easier.

In other words: no matter where you are in the world, whether it’s a luxury suite in Dubai or a budget hostel in Bangkok, you can keep your routine going. Because when you strip it down, fitness doesn’t require machines, fancy leggings, or a smoothie bar. It just requires you, your bodyweight, and a willingness to get a little bit sweaty between sightseeing.

What You Need to Know Before You Start

Before you launch into your best Rocky Balboa impression, there are a few things to consider about hotel room workouts:

  • Space reality check. You don’t need much. If you can lie down without hitting the minibar or the TV stand, you’re good. Starfish on the floor, if you fit, you can squat.
  • Noise levels. Some moves (looking at you, burpees) sound like an elephant tap dancing on the ceiling. If you’re in a paper-thin-walled Parisian boutique hotel, swap the jump-squats for something less… seismic.
  • Wardrobe flexibility. Honestly, pyjamas work just fine. And I may, or may have not, done squats in just my underwear. At the end of the day, a squat is a squat! The key is moving, not what you’re wearing.
  • Equipment (aka: what can fit in a carry-on). Bodyweight will take you far, but if you’re keen (pun intended, Sam), resistance bands can level you up. They pack light and make you feel like a pro.
  • Safety first. Watch out for ceiling fans when attempting victory jumps. Also, don’t use the wobbly hotel chair for step-ups unless you fancy explaining your sprained ankle to travel insurance.

The main point? Keep it simple, keep it safe, and don’t let perfection stop you from actually doing the thing. Because sweaty and slightly ridiculous in your room beats “I’ll start when I get home” every single time.

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Types of Hotel Room Workouts (The Big List)

Hotel rooms may be tiny, oddly shaped, and questionably carpeted, but they’re also the perfect stage for your fitness show. Here’s the buffet of options to keep you moving:

1 Bodyweight Basics

The bread and butter of hotel room workouts. No equipment, no excuses, and definitely no witnesses.

  • Push-ups (regular, incline using the bed, or decline with your feet on the chair).
  • Squats (standard, jump squats if your downstairs neighbour is forgiving).
  • Lunges (forwards, backwards, sideways…hotel corridor if you need extra space).
  • Planks (add shoulder taps, leg lifts, or weep quietly into the carpet).

2 Core Killers

Because abs don’t make themselves.

  • Bicycle crunches (on the world’s thinnest hotel carpet).
  • Mountain climbers (doubles as cardio).
  • Leg raises  (slow and controlled, like you’re trying not to wake a baby).
  • Russian Twists (bonus points if you use your DSLR or water bottle as a weight, functional fitness meets travel blogger chic).
  • Hollow holds (the deceptively innocent move that makes you question all your life choices in under 20 seconds).
man running on sand field
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3 Cardio in Small Spaces

For when you want to mimic a HIIT class without terrifying other guests.

  • High knees (knees to chest, arms pumping like you’re catching the last bus).
  • Jumping jacks (classic but effective).
  • Burpees (the international symbol of pain).
  • Quiet cardio hacks: shadow boxing, fast feet, speed squats, silent but deadly (to your quads).

4 Strength with Bands & Mini Equipment

If you’ve got a little space in your bag, these will give you maximum bang for your kilo.

  • Resistance bands (glute kickbacks, rows, shoulder presses).
  • Water-fill dumbbells (yes, they exist).
  • TRX suspension trainer (attach to any sturdy door and instantly look like an athlete).

5 Yoga & Stretching

Ideal for those mornings when jet lag has folded you into an origami swan.

  • Sun salutations (greet the day, or at least the slightly stained curtains).
  • Hip openers (perfect for long-haul flight recovery).
  • Travel-friendly yoga mats (or just use a towel and hope housekeeping doesn’t notice).
  • Apps like Down Dog or Glo can guide you when your brain is still in three time zones.
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6 Low-Impact / Quiet Workouts

When you don’t want to wake your travel buddy or earn angry reviews from the family below.

  • Pilates sequences (core, glutes, posture, hotel chairs beware).
  • Isometric holds (wall sits, glute bridges).
  • Balance moves (single-leg deadlifts without weights).

Think of this section like a menu, you don’t have to order everything at once. Mix and match depending on how much time you’ve got, how jet-lagged you feel, and whether you’re trying to torch calories or just stretch the stiffness out of your bones.

Apps & Digital Coaches to Keep You Accountable

Here’s the thing: left to my own devices, I’ll happily spend 40 minutes “warming up” by scrolling Instagram, and another 20 convincing myself I’ll work out after breakfast. Spoiler: I won’t. That’s where apps, timers, and actual humans come in. Accountability is the secret sauce of fitness, and you don’t have to be home to have it.

  • Calisthenics appsFreeletics, Madbarz, Thenics. Perfect if you like following structured programs and pretending your phone is your angry coach.
  • General fitness appsNike Training Club, Fitbod, Alo Moves. These have hotel-room-friendly options and workouts as short as 5 minutes (yes, even YOU have 5 minutes).
  • Yoga & Stretching appsDown Dog, Glo, Yoga With Adriene on YouTube. Ideal for stiff travel legs or when you’re one flight delay away from an emotional breakdown.
  • HIIT timers & interval apps – Tabata timers are brilliant for quick hotel sweat sessions. Press start, suffer, survive.
  • YouTube goldmines – Channels like Pamela Reif, Fitness Blender, and MadFit have “no equipment” playlists that will torch calories without needing a gym.
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And of course, there’s the real human option. I’m working with Sam Keen, my personal trainer, who makes sure I actually do the work. He sends me plans, checks in, and gives me just enough guilt to get up off the hotel bed and start squatting. If you’re someone who thrives on external accountability, an online coach might be your best investment.

The bottom line? You don’t need to be a lone wolf doing burpees at midnight. Whether it’s an app, YouTube, or a personal trainer like Sam, having a little guidance makes hotel room workouts far less skippable, and a lot more effective.

Building a Hotel Room Workout Routine That Works

The trick with hotel room workouts isn’t finding time (we all scroll TikTok for longer than a workout takes), it’s making the time you do have actually count. Whether you’ve got 10 minutes before breakfast, 20 minutes before your meeting, or 30 minutes before Netflix auto-plays the next episode, here’s how to structure it.

The 10-Minute “No Excuses” Blast

When you’ve got just enough time to brush your teeth and sweat.

  • 1 minute high knees
  • 12 push-ups (incline push ups work too)
  • 15 squats
  • 12 bicycle crunches
  • 30-second plank

Repeat twice. Done. Now shower before room service knocks.

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The 20-Minute Balanced Burn

For when you’re committed but still hungry for that hotel buffet.

  • Warm-up: 1 minute jumping jacks + 1 minute shadow boxing
  • 12–15 push-ups
  • 15 lunges (each leg)
  • 15 glute bridges
  • 20 Russian twists (bonus points if holding your guidebook)
  • 30-second wall sit
  • 30-second hollow hold

Complete 3 rounds, resting 1 minute between rounds.

The 30-Minute Full-Body Sweat Fest

Because sometimes you do want to earn that second plate of croissants.

  • Warm-up: 2 minutes cardio (high knees, butt kicks, jumping jacks)
  • Circuit (repeat 3x):
    • 12 push-ups
    • 20 squats
    • 15 chair dips
    • 20 mountain climbers
    • 15 step-ups (each leg, use a sturdy chair)
    • 20 Russian twists
  • Finish: 1-minute plank hold (bonus: shout motivational obscenities at yourself for the full 60 seconds).

The secret? Pick the one that matches your schedule and energy. Because something, even a short blast, always beats nothing. And over time, these mini routines add up to serious results. Trust me, my trainer Sam has eyes like a hawk and he knows when I skip a plank.

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Pro Tips for Progression (aka: How Not to Plateau in Your Pyjamas)

Hotel room workouts are brilliant, but if you keep doing the same 15 squats forever, your body eventually goes “meh” and stops changing. Here’s how to keep progressing without needing a single dumbbell rack:

  • Add reps – If you can do 12 push-ups easily, go for 15, then 20. More reps = more challenge.
  • Slow it down – Moving slowly (think 3 seconds down, 3 seconds up) turns a simple squat into a quad-burning nightmare.
  • Shorten your rest – Instead of a 60-second breather, cut it to 30. Your heart rate will love/hate you for it.
  • Stack sets – Add extra rounds of your routine. Three circuits? Try four. Or five.
  • Combine moves – Squat + shoulder press with a water bottle, lunge + twist, push-up + shoulder tap. Combo moves burn more in less time.
  • Play with time – Instead of counting reps, work for 30–40 seconds per exercise. It forces you to push harder.
  • Upgrade with bands – Resistance bands pack light and turn “easy” moves into sweat-fests. Squats, rows, glute kickbacks, all harder with a little elastic.

The beauty is you don’t need a single dumbbell or treadmill. You just need creativity, consistency, and maybe a trainer like Sam sending you voice notes reminding you that “holiday calories don’t count” is sadly a myth.

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Staying Motivated (When Room Service Pancakes Are Calling)

Let’s be honest: the hardest part of hotel room workouts isn’t the burpees, it’s the getting started. Because when there’s a warm croissant downstairs, or Netflix whispering seductively from the hotel TV, “just one more episode” always sounds better than “just one more push-up.”

Here’s how I (mostly) win that battle:

  • Accountability is king. My trainer Sam Keen checks in on me, which means I can’t just text “WiFi was bad” as an excuse when he knows I was posting travel selfies all day.
  • Reward system. Yes, I bribe myself. Complete the workout = ice cream for lunch. 
  • Set micro-goals. Instead of “stay fit forever,” I aim for “do three 20-minute workouts this week.” Much less overwhelming, much more achievable.
  • Track progress. Not just weight (ugh), but how much stronger I feel, how many reps I can do, or whether my jeans still fit after tapas week.
  • Make it fun. If I’m dreading a workout, I’ll throw on music, do a dance break, or swap burpees for something less soul-crushing. Sometimes I might just do a dance class, because that still gets a sweat on and its always guaranteed to put me in a good mood!

Motivation isn’t about always wanting to do the thing. It’s about setting up sneaky little systems that get you moving even when you don’t. And trust me: once you’ve smashed out 15 minutes in your room, you feel smug enough to skip the lift and take the stairs.

wake up and workout slogan on light box among sports equipment
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Packing a Portable Hotel Gym

Confession time: I only ever travel with resistance bands. They’re light, they fit in the corner of my bag, and they make every squat, lunge, and push-up about ten times harder (in the good way). Honestly, you don’t need more than that to stay fit while you’re on the move.

But if you’re the type who loves options, or just really wants to turn your room into a DIY fitness studio, here are some extras worth considering:

  • Mini loop bands – A smaller version of resistance bands, perfect for glutes. (Translation: guaranteed to make stairs feel like Everest the next day.)
  • Jump rope – Cheap, tiny, and brilliant cardio. Just don’t attempt it under a low ceiling unless you want to explain a broken light fixture to reception.
  • Sliders – Core killers in disguise. Paper plates on hotel carpet work if you’re desperate.
  • Travel yoga mat – Foldable, light, and far less questionable than sweating on a hotel floor that’s probably older than you.
  • TRX suspension trainer – Clips onto a door and suddenly you look like an elite athlete. Bonus: it doubles as a very suspicious-looking strap when airport security opens your bag.
  • Massage ball or mini foam roller – Not essential, but your back will thank you after a long-haul flight and a night in a questionable mattress.
  • Optional overachiever gear: water-fill dumbbells or collapsible kettlebells. Cool, yes. Practical for frequent travellers? Meh.

The truth? Resistance bands alone will give you endless options for strength training on the road. Everything else is just the cherry on top, fun if you’ve got the space, but far from necessary.

group of person walking in mountain
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When to Skip Hotel Room Workouts (And Still Stay Active)

Here’s a little secret from someone who’s lived out of hotels more than her own house: you don’t always need to grind out a workout in your room. Travel itself can be wonderfully active if you let it. So if the thought of another round of squats in your pyjamas makes you want to cry, try this instead:

  • Active sightseeing. Forget the hop-on-hop-off bus. Walk the city, cycle through backstreets, climb towers, hike viewpoints. Your calves will do the work for you.
  • Hotel stair runs. Hate the gym? Race the stairs. Yes, it’s sweaty. Yes, people will stare. That just means you’re doing it right.
  • Swimming pools. If your hotel has one, a few laps beat yet another sweaty plank. Bonus: it counts as “relaxing” too.
  • Dance party for one. Blast some music and dance around your room. Burns calories, boosts mood, and doubles as entertainment for anyone who can see into your window.
  • Adventure days. Kayaking, hiking, surfing, even just carrying your luggage up cobbled streets in the Cotswolds, all of it counts.

The point? Don’t beat yourself up if you miss a session. Staying fit while travelling is about balance, not perfection. A day spent hiking ruins or exploring a city on foot is every bit as valid as a structured hotel workout. And honestly? Way more fun.

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The Big Wrap-Up: Travel, Fitness, and Why Hotel Room Workouts Actually Work

For years, I thought staying fit while travelling was impossible. No routine, no gym, no chance. But now, thanks to a bit of accountability (cheers Sam Keen!) and a whole lot of experimenting, I’ve realised that fitness doesn’t require a fancy studio, a treadmill, or even leaving the room. What it really requires is consistency, creativity, and a willingness to sweat between sightseeing sessions.

Whether it’s a 10-minute blast before breakfast, a band workout after a long day, or just choosing stairs over the lift, these little habits add up. They keep you stronger, healthier, and feeling good enough to actually enjoy the adventures you came for.

So next time you’re unpacking in a hotel room, don’t see it as four walls and an empty minibar, see it as your personal training ground. Because hotel room workouts aren’t just convenient; they’re proof that you can stay fit anywhere, anytime, no excuses. And honestly? That smug post-workout feeling pairs perfectly with exploring the culture (aka as food) of your destination. 

Honestly, having Sam in my corner has been the biggest game-changer. If you want that kind of support too, you can book a free call with him here, just don’t tell him I still occasionally skip burpees.

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