HOW DOES CYCLING IMPROVE CARDIOVASCULAR HEALTH IN WOMEN?
Cycling improves cardiovascular health in women by strengthening the heart muscle and enhancing oxygen delivery, which significantly reduces the risk of stroke and coronary heart disease.
Regular aerobic pedaling lowers "bad" LDL cholesterol and systemic inflammation, while endurance training has been scientifically proven to lower resting heart rate by several beats per minute within just a few weeks of consistent training.
Getting at least 150 minutes a week of moderate physical activity can put you at a lower risk of both heart disease and stroke, according to the U.S. Centers For Disease Control And Prevention (CDC).
You can reduce your risk even further with more physical activity, which can also lower blood pressure and improve your cholesterol levels.
DOES CYCLING IMPROVE ENERGY LEVELS FOR WOMEN?
Cycling does improve energy levels, especially for women. Think of cycling as "upgrading your internal furnace." You aren't just burning calories during the ride; you’re teaching your body to be a high-performance machine that stays energized and lean even while you're resting.
Cycling improves metabolic efficiency by increasing the density of mitochondria in muscle cells, which allows the body to burn fat and carbohydrates more effectively for fuel.
By engaging the glutes, quads and hamstrings, which are the body’s largest "metabolic engines," cycling creates a significant "afterburn" effect (EPOC), keeping your calorie expenditure elevated for hours after you’ve finished your ride.
CAN REGULAR CYCLING STRENGTHEN A WOMAN’S IMMUNE SYSTEM?
Yes, regular cycling builds immune resilience. Think of cycling as your internal bodyguard. It’s the difference between catching every seasonal cold and having an "armor-plated" defense system that keeps you on the bike and out of bed.
Cycling promotes the circulation of white blood cells and stimulates the thymus gland, which in turn produces T-cells that are essential for fighting off infections.
And this study, published in the Aging Cell journal in 2018, shows that lifelong cyclists’ immune systems retain several youthful characteristics and show reduced age-related decline, which helps protect them against the natural decline in immunity that happens as we age.
WHY IS CYCLING THE BEST "AGE-PROOFING" EXERCISE FOR WOMEN’S JOINTS?
Cycling is one of the best “hacks” for keeping your joints mobile.
While your peers might be slowing down due to achy knees (especially when it comes to perimenopause), cycling can keep you moving like you’re 25, even when the calendar says otherwise.

Cycling is the gold standard for joint longevity because it provides a closed-kinetic-chain movement that lubricates the hips, knees and ankles with synovial fluid without the jarring impact of running or high-intensity interval training (HIIT).
For women in midlife, cycling’s low-impact nature allows for high-intensity cardiovascular training that preserves cartilage and maintains a full range of motion, even as estrogen levels fluctuate.
Since your bike saddle supports roughly 70 percent of your body weight, the stress from workouts is placed on your muscles and your cardiovascular system (right where it belongs), rather than on your joints.
The CDC and the U.S. National Institute on Aging (NIA) both recommend low-impact aerobic activity to prevent disuse atrophy and manage symptoms of osteoarthritis.
DOES CYCLING HELP WOMEN MANAGE STRESS & LOWER CORTISOL LEVELS?
Cycling can help women manage stress levels and lower cortisol. You are physically pedaling away from your stressors. And by the time you unclip, it's as if your brain has re-tuned its frequency from panic level to power.
This is because cycling reduces stress and lowers cortisol levels by triggering the release of endocannabinoids and endorphins, which act as natural circuit breakers for the body's fight-or-flight response.
The rhythmic, bilateral nature of pedaling allows the nervous system to shift from a high-alert sympathetic state into a restorative parasympathetic state, effectively "flushing out" the physical remnants of a high-pressure workday.
Chronic stress leads to elevated cortisol, which, in women, is often linked to mid-section weight gain and disrupted hormonal cycles. According to Bikeability: