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In A Nutshell
- A new analysis of 59 randomized trials found that people in exercise programs were 15–21% more likely to stay smoke-free compared to non-exercising control groups.
- Even a single workout can reduce cigarette cravings for up to 30 minutes, with high-intensity exercise producing the strongest effect.
- Aerobic exercise showed the clearest long-term benefits for quitting, while evidence for yoga, resistance training, and HIIT remains limited.
- No trials have yet tested whether exercise helps people quit vaping, a gap researchers call a critical oversight.
A large new analysis of randomized trials has found that regular exercise can meaningfully boost the odds of staying smoke-free, and that even a single short workout can blunt the urge to light up for up to 30 minutes afterward.
Quitting smoking has never been easy. Standard treatments like nicotine patches, prescription medications, and counseling can roughly double or triple quit rates, but in the real world, fewer than one in five people manages to stay smoke-free at the 12-month mark. Relapse is common, fueled by side effects, cost, limited access to specialists, and the persistent pull of cravings. For many people, medication isn’t an option at all, whether because of health conditions, cost, or simply a preference to avoid drugs. That gap has researchers looking hard at behavioral strategies, and exercise keeps rising to the top of the list.
A team of researchers conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis, a rigorous study that pools and analyzes findings from many individual trials, pulling together results from 59 randomized controlled trials involving more than 9,000 adults. Published in the Journal of Sport and Health Science, the analysis makes a compelling case that exercise deserves a serious role in how smoking cessation is approached, both by individuals trying to quit and by the healthcare providers helping them.
The Numbers Behind the Sweat
The analysis separated the 59 trials into two categories: studies that looked at what happens after a single workout session, and studies that tracked people who exercised regularly over a longer period.
On the long-term side, pooling data from 23 trials involving more than 5,500 participants, the researchers found that people in exercise programs were 15% more likely to stay smoke-free throughout a defined follow-up period compared to those in control groups. A separate measure, looking at whether people had avoided smoking in the seven days before a check-in point, showed an even stronger result: a 21% higher likelihood of remaining smoke-free among exercisers. Regular exercise was also linked to smoking fewer cigarettes per day, with an average reduction of about two cigarettes daily compared to non-exercising control groups.
Those numbers may not sound dramatic, but they matter. In the world of smoking cessation, modest improvements compound over time, and any strategy that chips away at tobacco use carries real health benefits.

When Just One Workout Makes a Difference
Perhaps the most immediately practical finding involves what happens right after a single exercise session. Across 10 trials, a single bout of exercise produced moderate-to-large reductions in cravings immediately after finishing, with effects still detectable at the 10-minute, 20-minute, and 30-minute marks post-exercise.
Intensity mattered. High-intensity exercise produced the largest drop in cravings, followed by moderate-intensity activity. Low-intensity exercise showed only a small effect that wasn’t statistically meaningful. Sessions as short as 5 to 30 minutes were found to be effective for managing acute cravings.
The proposed explanation involves brain chemistry. Exercise is thought to trigger temporary increases in the brain’s feel-good signaling systems, including pathways tied to dopamine and natural opioid-like compounds, while also reducing the stress hormone cortisol. These changes may dial down the reward-seeking pull that makes cravings so hard to resist.
Not All Exercise Is Created Equal
When it came to what type of exercise was most beneficial for long-term quitting, aerobic exercise, think brisk walking, cycling, or treadmill workouts, showed the clearest, most consistent benefits. Other forms like resistance training, yoga, and high-intensity interval training appeared in fewer studies and produced more mixed or limited results, though some suggested potential benefits for cravings. The researchers noted that the evidence base for these non-aerobic options is simply not yet large enough to draw firm conclusions.
Session frequency also appeared to play a role. Programs involving one to two sessions per week showed larger effects on staying smoke-free than those requiring more frequent sessions, though the researchers cautioned that this finding warrants careful interpretation given the variability across study designs.
A Tool Most Smokers Haven’t Tried
Unlike prescription medications, exercise is generally low-risk for most people and does not require a prescription, though people with heart, lung, mobility, or other health concerns should check with a clinician before starting vigorous activity. Unlike some digital programs or counseling services, exercise can often be done without internet access or a specialist, especially when it is as simple as a brisk walk.
The paper also notes that exercise may help with several problems that often make quitting harder, including mood, sleep, anxiety, depression, and post-cessation weight gain, all common forces that push people back toward cigarettes.
One notable gap: not a single trial in the entire body of evidence examined whether exercise helps people quit vaping or e-cigarettes. Given how rapidly e-cigarette use has grown and how common dual use, smoking traditional cigarettes while also vaping, has become, the researchers called this absence a critical oversight. Future research, the authors stressed, needs to address this directly.
Despite the encouraging findings, the researchers were careful not to overstate results. Evidence quality was rated as low for abstinence outcomes, and the authors concluded that exercise is best understood as a complement to existing approaches like medication and behavioral counseling, not a stand-alone solution.
Exercise won’t replace the quit-smoking toolkit, but it may be one of the most underused tools in it. For the millions of people who light up every day and want to stop, lacing up for even a short, vigorous walk during a craving window might do more than just clear their head.
Disclaimer: This article is based on a systematic review and meta-analysis and is intended for informational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Anyone considering changes to their smoking cessation plan should consult a qualified healthcare provider.
Paper Notes
Limitations
The authors identified several important limitations. Certainty of evidence was rated as low for abstinence outcomes, primarily due to concerns about risk of bias across included studies, inconsistency in results, imprecision in some estimates, and potential publication bias, particularly for seven-day abstinence rates. High levels of variability were observed in some pooled analyses, especially for craving outcomes in exercise training studies. The review was restricted to peer-reviewed English-language journal articles, which may introduce language bias and limit the global representativeness of findings. Several single-bout studies that used crossover designs were flagged for potential carryover effects, meaning residual physical or psychological effects from a prior session may have influenced craving measurements. The review also could not conduct more detailed subgroup or regression analyses for some outcomes due to the limited number of studies available and insufficient reporting of key variables such as exercise adherence, baseline nicotine dependence severity, and intervention setting. No included trials evaluated vaping or e-cigarette cessation outcomes, which the authors describe as a critical evidence gap.
Funding and Disclosures
According to the paper, this project received no specific funding. One author is noted as being supported by a Medical Research Future Fund Emerging Leader Grant. No other funding sources or conflicts of interest were described in the available content.
Publication Details
Authors: Ben Singh, Jasmine Petersen, Aaron Miatke, Dot Dumuid, Kimberley Szeto, Kylie A. Dankiw, Maddison L. Mellow, Sowmya Jayatheertha Vaikar, Emily Eglitis, Mason Zhou, Rachel Curtis, Catherine Simpson, Joshua Hassan, Serhat Kavlakoglu, Lochlan Gotch, Carol Maher | Affiliations: Alliance for Research in Exercise, Nutrition and Activity (ARENA), Adelaide University, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia; Southern Adelaide Local Health Network (SALHN), SA Health, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia | Journal: Journal of Sport and Health Science | Paper Title: Exercise-based interventions for smoking cessation: A systematic review and meta-analysis | DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jshs.2026.101138 | PROSPERO Registration: CRD420251006473







