Physical activity and exercise intensity terminology: A joint American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) expert statement and Exercise and Sport Science Australia (ESSA) consensus statement

Author Identifier (ORCID)

Robert U. Newton: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0302-6129

Sophia Nimphius: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3524-0245

Abstract

The evidence supporting the many beneficial effects of physical activity, including exercise, is overwhelming. This has led to numerous publications, statements, and position stands providing evidence-based recommendations to realize the performance-enhancing and therapeutic benefits of exercise. However, one factor hampering research and limiting the adoption of these recommendations is the inconsistent use of terminology associated with different exercise intensities. The goal of this international group of researchers and practitioners, therefore, was to propose standardized physical activity and exercise intensity terminology that has utility across all ages, sexes, genders, physical abilities, conditions, applications, and activities. After much discussion, we propose a standard terminology for physical activity, exercise, and sport and human performance comprising five exercise intensities: very low, low, moderate, high, and very high. We also propose five different descriptors for the perception of effort that align with the five intensities we have suggested: very easy, easy, somewhat hard, hard, and very hard. To enable consistent use of these descriptors with both cardiorespiratory and resistance exercise, we suggest not using descriptors such as light, heavy, weak, or strong (which might be perceived as only being applicable to describing load). We appreciate that some fields have long-established terminology and may be reluctant to change. Nonetheless, at a minimum, the terminology proposed here allows for more clarity when comparing the different exercise intensity descriptors currently used by different fields. Finally, we hope this will be an important "first step" in harmonizing the descriptions of exercise intensity across the fields of physical activity for public health, exercise science, and sport science.

Document Type

Editorial

Date of Publication

11-1-2025

Volume

57

Issue

11

PubMed ID

41085254

Publication Title

Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise

Publisher

Wolters Kluwer

School

Exercise Medicine Research Institute / School of Medical and Health Sciences

RAS ID

88132

Comments

Bishop, D. J., Beck, B., Biddle, S. J. H., Denay, K. L., Ferri, A., Gibala, M. J., Headley, S., Jones, A. M., Jung, M., Lee, M. J., Moholdt, T., Newton, R. U., Nimphius, S., Pescatello, L. S., Saner, N. J., & Tzarimas, C. (2025). Physical activity and exercise intensity terminology: A joint American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) expert statement and Exercise and Sport Science Australia (ESSA) consensus statement. Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, 57(11), 2599–2613. https://doi.org/10.1249/MSS.0000000000003795

Copyright

free_to_read

First Page

2599

Last Page

2613

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Link to publisher version (DOI)

10.1249/MSS.0000000000003795