HIIT Blast — Workout 2
Exercise Breakdown
26 exercises in Workout 2
Warm-up7 exercises3m 31s
“Bring your elbows together, rock side to side.”
“Left arm on the inner thigh, right arm reaches up.”
“Grab onto your toes, extend your knees fully.”
“Nice, low squats, knees ninety degrees or even a little bit lower.”
“Squat down and just reach forward.”
Strength11 exercises8m 15s
“Hinge a little bit forward with the upper body just to make sure that you're activating the glutes.”
“Don't want you to arch the neck like this. Keep on looking down.”
“We're never holding our breath throughout any movement.”
“Chest is open. Keep those dumbbells on the shoulders, pulse.”
Cardio5 exercises3m 45s
“Keep that upper body weight leaning forward.”
“Can you pick up the pace a little bit more?”
“No thinking, just get moving.”
Cool-down3 exercises1m 33s
“Push the knee out to the side.”
Muscles Targeted
Primary
Secondary
Equipment & Modifications
Equipment Needed
- dumbbells
- mat
Don't Have Equipment?
You can substitute with:
Available Modifications
- Gently tap the knee down or keep it just above the mat
- Drop those dumbbells down if needed
- You can also step if you don't wanna jump
- If you can't jump, just knee up, step back
- Skip that jump if needed
- Option to have the dumbbells or not
- Knee on the mat (easier)
- Knee off the mat (advanced)
- Alternating knee on/off (intermediate)
- Knee on the mat
- Knee off the mat
- Stay up for those most advanced
- Dumbbells on shoulders (easier)
- Dumbbells forward (harder)
- Alternating shoulders/forward (intermediate)
- Reach the dumbbells out for extra challenge
- Come down to your elbows if it feels good
Coaching Highlights from Natalia Gunnlaugs
“Hinge a little bit forward with the upper body just to make sure that you're activating the glutes — I tell every new client the same thing: if you can't feel the muscle working, slow down until you can. Speed is not the goal.”
Form
“Don't want you to arch the neck like this. Keep on looking down. This is non-negotiable — I've seen the injury that happens when you skip this step, and it's not worth the two extra reps.”
Safety
“Appreciate all the hard work that you just did. Some days you show up and everything clicks. Other days it's a fight from the first rep. Both count.”
Motivation
“We're never holding our breath throughout any movement.”
Form
Health Benefits
If your heart rate hasn't been above 'walking the dog' pace in months and you know it, this 25-minute session is where you start — I designed it for women who want cardiovascular conditioning without spending an hour on a treadmill. If you're in your 30s or 40s dealing with metabolic slowdown, weight creep, or that specific afternoon energy crash — HIIT addresses all three through the same mechanism. You'll need dumbbells, mat and the willingness to be uncomfortable for 45 seconds at a time.
cholesterol jump
90% relevantIncreases HDL (good cholesterol) and lowers LDL (bad cholesterol) through cardiovascular exercise.; Improves insulin sensitivity and glucose metabolism, which indirectly impacts cholesterol levels.; Reduces visceral fat, a key contributor to dyslipidemia.; Builds lean muscle mass, boosting metabolism and aiding in weight management.; Reduces systemic inflammation, a factor in cardiovascular disease progression.; Manages stress, which can influence cholesterol through hormonal pathways.
heart disease risk
90% relevantimproving cardiovascular efficiency; reducing blood pressure; improving cholesterol profiles; enhancing insulin sensitivity; reducing systemic inflammation; maintaining healthy weight
stomach cancer risk
90% relevantimproving metabolic health and insulin sensitivity; reducing chronic inflammation; maintaining a healthy body weight and reducing visceral fat; enhancing immune function; improving gut motility and microbiome diversity
gynecological cancer risk
90% relevantImproved insulin sensitivity and glucose metabolism; Reduced chronic inflammation; Enhanced immune function; Maintenance of healthy body weight and fat mass; Modulation of hormone levels (e.g., estrogen, androgens); Stress reduction and improved psychological well-being
heart health awareness
90% relevantimproving cardiovascular endurance; reducing blood pressure; improving cholesterol profiles; maintaining healthy weight; stress reduction; improving insulin sensitivity
Relevant For
Frequently Asked Questions
What muscles does this HIIT workout target?
Your glutes, quads, shoulders take the biggest hit, with secondary work through core, hips, full body. But here's what most people miss about hiit workouts: the primary target is your cardiovascular system, not individual muscles. A 2024 meta-analysis by Dupuit et al — found HIIT reduces visceral fat in perimenopausal women more effectively than steady-state cardio. The 26 exercises in this 25-minute session with Natalia Gunnlaugs are designed to keep your heart rate in the 80-90% zone for short bursts. That's where the metabolic magic happens. Your muscles are along for the ride — and they benefit too.
What equipment do I need for this workout?
You'll need: dumbbells, mat. Don't have these? water bottles, canned goods work as substitutes — I've coached women through this with filled water bottles and it works. The resistance is what matters, not the brand. Natalia Gunnlaugs shows form with standard equipment, but anything that adds load will do. Just make sure it's comfortable to grip — slippery objects and high-intensity moves don't mix. This pairs well with a high intensity workout for fat loss approach. This pairs well with a high intensity interval training approach.
Is this workout suitable for beginners?
This is rated intermediate, so it assumes some baseline fitness. But Natalia Gunnlaugs offers modifications: Gently tap the knee down or keep it just above the mat; Drop those dumbbells down if needed. If you've been training consistently for 2-3 months, you're ready. If you're brand new, start with a beginner-level workout in this series and work up. Nobody benefits from ego-lifting into an intermediate session on day one. This pairs well with a low impact cardio approach.
How long is this workout?
Approximately 25 minutes, including warm-up and cool-down. Natalia Gunnlaugs wastes zero time — 26 exercises, no standing around, no 3-minute rest periods. The ACSM recommends 150 minutes of moderate or 75 minutes of vigorous exercise per week. Two or three of these sessions gets you there. That's 40-60 minutes per week of actual exercise. The rest of your week is yours.
Are there modifications available?
For every exercise. Natalia Gunnlaugs cues modifications as they come up: Gently tap the knee down or keep it just above the mat; Drop those dumbbells down if needed; You can also step if you don't wanna jump — I'll say this once: using a modification is not failing. It's choosing the version that lets you maintain form for the entire set. A half-range pushup with a flat back beats a full-range pushup with a sagging spine every time. Pick the version where your technique stays clean.
How many calories does a HIIT workout burn?
The honest answer: it depends on your weight, fitness level, and actual effort. A 25-minute HIIT session typically burns 200-400 calories for a 140-170lb woman working at true high intensity. But here's what matters more than the calorie number: EPOC. Excess post-exercise oxygen consumption. Dupuit et al.'s meta-analysis found HIIT triggers metabolic elevation for up to 24 hours after the workout ends. So the calories you burn during the session are just the opening act. The real metabolic work happens while you're making dinner.
Is HIIT safe for women over 40?
Yes — with appropriate modification and a proper warm-up, which Natalia Gunnlaugs includes. A 2024 systematic review by Huynh et al — found aerobic exercise (including HIIT) significantly improves cardiovascular health in postmenopausal women with no increase in injury rates when progressed appropriately. The key phrase is 'progressed appropriately.' Start with the modification. Build up over 2-3 weeks. If you have joint issues, swap jumping for stepping. HIIT means high heart rate, not high impact. Those are two different things.
How often should I do HIIT workouts?
Two to three times per week, with at least one rest day between sessions. Your body needs 48 hours to recover from genuine high-intensity work. If you're doing HIIT every day, you're either not going hard enough or heading straight toward overtraining. Mandrup et al — demonstrated that three sessions per week was the sweet spot for improving insulin sensitivity in menopausal women. More wasn't better. Recovery is not laziness — it's where adaptation happens.
Related Workouts & Topics
More from HIIT Blast
More with Natalia Gunnlaugs
Browse Exercise Collections
Helpful For These Concerns
About the Trainer
Natalia Gunnlaugs
Cardio Trainer
From: HIIT Blast









