“I want to get fit but my shift schedule makes it impossible.”
This is what police officers tell themselves. And it’s half true.
Shift work makes consistent training harder. But it doesn’t make it impossible. You just need a different approach.
Here’s a workout plan actually designed for rotating shifts.
Why Standard Workout Plans Fail Shift Workers
The Standard Plan Says: “Monday, Wednesday, Friday are upper body. Tuesday, Thursday are lower body.”
Reality for a shift worker: You work Monday-Tuesday nights, have Wednesday off, work Thursday night, have Friday off, work Saturday day shift.
The standard plan doesn’t fit. So you either skip workouts or force-fit them into your schedule and get inconsistent results.
The solution: Stop trying to follow a rigid schedule. Instead, use a “workout menu” approach where you pick workouts based on your schedule and energy level.
The Workout Menu System
Instead of “Monday = chest,” you have a menu of workouts:
- Strength Day (A): Heavy pushing, pulling, and compound movements
- Lower Body Day (B): Heavy legs and explosive power
- Conditioning Day (C): Work capacity and cardiovascular fitness
- Recovery Day (D): Light mobility, stretching, optional core work
Each week, you aim for 3-4 workouts from this menu. Which ones you do depends on your schedule and energy.
Workout A: Strength Day (Upper Body + Core Emphasis)
Warm-Up (10 minutes):
- 5 minutes easy cardio
- 5 minutes mobility and movement prep
Main Strength Work:
- A1. Bench Press or Floor Press: 4 sets x 5 reps
- A2. Bent-Over Barbell Row: 4 sets x 5 reps
- (Do A1, rest, do A2, rest — repeat)
Secondary Strength Work:
- B1. Overhead Press: 3 sets x 5 reps
- B2. Pull-Ups or Assisted Pull-Ups: 3 sets x 5-8 reps
Accessory Work:
- C1. Farmer’s Carry: 3 sets x 40 yards
- C2. Face Pulls: 3 sets x 12-15 reps
Core Finisher:
- Dead Bugs: 3 sets x 10 per side
- Pallof Press: 2 sets x 8 per side
Total Time: 50-60 minutes
Workout B: Lower Body + Explosive Power
Warm-Up (10 minutes):
- 5 minutes easy cardio
- 5 minutes hip and leg mobility
Main Strength Work:
- A1. Squat or Leg Press: 4 sets x 5 reps
- A2. Romanian Deadlift: 4 sets x 5 reps
Explosive Power Work:
- B1. Box Jumps or Jump Squats: 3 sets x 5 reps (explosive, not fatigued)
- B2. Sled Push: 3 sets x 40 yards
Accessory Work:
- Lunges or Step-Ups: 3 sets x 8 per leg
- Leg Curl or Nordic Curl: 3 sets x 5-8 reps
Conditioning Finisher:
- 3 rounds for time:
- 500m row (or 3 minutes bike)
- 15 burpees
Total Time: 55-65 minutes
Workout C: Conditioning / Work Capacity
Choose ONE of these options based on your energy level and available time:
Option 1: Steady-State Cardio (40-50 minutes)
- Warm-up: 5 minutes easy
- Main: 30-40 minutes at conversational pace (bike, run, row, or mix)
- Cool-down: 5 minutes easy
Option 2: High-Intensity Intervals (35-40 minutes)
- Warm-up: 5 minutes easy
- Main: 6 rounds of (3 minutes hard at 80% effort, 1 minute easy recovery)
- Cool-down: 5 minutes easy
Option 3: MetCon Circuit (30-35 minutes)
- 5 rounds for time (with minimal rest between rounds):
- 15 calorie row (or 1 minute bike)
- 12 kettlebell swings (heavy)
- 10 burpees
- Rest 1-2 minutes between rounds
Option 4: EMOM (Every Minute On the Minute, 30 minutes)
- Minute 1: 10 calorie row
- Minute 2: 8 kettlebell swings
- Minute 3: 5 burpees
- (Repeat for 30 minutes. Rest any remaining time in each minute)
Total Time: 30-50 minutes depending on option
Workout D: Recovery / Mobility
Use this on days after heavy patrol shifts or when you’re genuinely fatigued.
- 5-10 minutes easy walking or light stretching
- 15-20 minute mobility circuit:
- 90/90 Hip Stretch: 2 minutes per side
- World’s Greatest Stretch: 5 reps per side
- Thoracic Rotation: 10 per side
- Child’s Pose: 2 minutes
- Quadriceps Stretch: 1 minute per leg
- Hamstring Stretch: 1 minute per leg
- Shoulder Mobility (band work): 5 minutes
- Core Work (if you want):
- Hollow Hold: 3 sets x 20-30 seconds
- Dead Bugs: 2 sets x 10 per side
Total Time: 30-40 minutes
The Weekly Structure for Common Shift Schedules
Schedule A: 3-day 12-hour Shifts (Mon-Tue-Wed nights, Thu-Sun off)
- Monday (before shift): Workout A or B (whichever you prefer)
- Thursday (morning after time off): Workout A or B (whichever you didn’t do Monday)
- Friday: Workout C (conditioning — lower intensity if still tired)
- Saturday: Workout D (recovery) or skip
Total: 3 workouts per week (2 heavy, 1 conditioning)
Schedule B: 5-day Rotating Shifts (Variable schedule)
- Work with your schedule. Aim for 3-4 workouts per week whenever possible.
- Pick 2 days that work best for you (usually your longest consecutive off days)
- Do Workout A and B on those days
- Add Workout C (conditioning) whenever you get a third workout opportunity
Schedule C: 4-on, 4-off (Four 12-hour shifts, four days off)
- First day off (Day 1): Recovery/Mobility only (you’re tired from shift)
- Day 2: Workout A (heavy upper body)
- Day 3: Workout B (heavy lower body)
- Day 4: Workout C (conditioning)
- Back to shift for 4 days (no training, focus on rest)
The Key Principles
Principle 1: 3-4 Workouts Per Week Is Enough
You don’t need 5-6 workouts per week. In fact, that’s too much when you’re dealing with shift work stress and sleep disruption.
3-4 workouts consistently will give you 90% of the results. The extra workouts would only give you 10% more benefit but cost you a lot in terms of recovery.
Principle 2: Heavy Work Is Most Important
Of your 3-4 workouts, make sure 2 of them are heavy strength work (Workout A and B).
This maintains your strength and muscle mass. It’s more important than conditioning.
Principle 3: Flexibility Matters More Than Perfection
If you miss a workout, don’t try to make it up. Just pick the next available workout from the menu.
If you’re exhausted, do Workout D instead of a heavy workout. Recovery is part of the plan.
Principle 4: Train for Your Job
These workouts are designed to improve your job performance:
- Heavy strength work → Better at controlling suspects, moving obstacles
- Explosive power → Better at running, jumping, recovering from impacts
- Conditioning → Better at sustained effort during long patrols or foot pursuits
Principle 5: Nutrition + Training = Results
Training alone won’t get you results. You need proper nutrition (especially protein).
If you’re not controlling your food, you won’t see the changes you want from training.
How to Get Started
Week 1-2: Learn the Movements
- Focus on form and learning the workouts
- Use moderate weight (not too heavy)
- Do 2-3 workouts per week
Week 3-4: Increase Intensity
- Use heavier weights on strength days
- Push harder on conditioning days
- Aim for 3-4 workouts per week
Week 5+: Cycle and Progress
- Every 4 weeks, slightly increase weights or reps
- Swap exercises if they get stale
- Maintain 3-4 workouts per week consistently
Real Talk: Why This Actually Works
This plan works because:
- It’s flexible (fits any shift schedule)
- It’s scalable (works whether you’re tired or energized)
- It’s job-specific (trains the movements you actually need)
- It’s sustainable (doesn’t require 5-6 days per week commitment)
- It balances strength, power, and conditioning
If you’re a police officer and you want to be fit, this plan will work. You just have to do it.
The Bottom Line
Rotating shifts make consistent training harder. But they don’t make it impossible.
Use this plan:
- Pick 3-4 workouts from the menu each week
- Do 2 heavy strength workouts (A and B)
- Add 1-2 conditioning or recovery workouts (C or D)
- Adjust based on your energy and schedule
- Stay consistent for 8-12 weeks
You’ll be noticeably stronger, faster, and more fit.
More importantly, you’ll be better at your job and better able to handle its physical demands.
That’s the goal.