The Physical Benefits of Rucking

The Physical Benefits of Rucking

Humans have been walking with weight forever. Rucking gives modern people a way to access the numerous benefits of walking with weight. These benefits include improved strength, endurance, heart health, and mental health. Rucking is a full body workout that torches calories, and it’s easy and free to get started.

What are the benefits of rucking?

Rucking improves fitness. It makes the heart, lungs, bones, and muscles strong. Rucking improves mood and sleep. It helps people connect with others, find new places, and get outdoors.

Everyone can benefit from rucking, and it doesn’t take long to see and feel the results.

Our Special Forces roots taught us that rucking is the ultimate exercise. It’s used by the most elite military units to build endurance and strength, and we think it’s time everyone else gets on board.

 

12 Physical Benefits of Rucking

The physical benefits of rucking are probably more than we can list here, but these 12 are a great place to start. As you begin rucking, you’ll see physical benefits that are unique to you, but everyone can get excited about...

1. Burning 3X the calories as walking, and only a bit less than running.

Our Rucking Calorie Calculator can give you an estimate of how many calories you burn while rucking, but generally 3X the amount of walking calories is expected. Rucking is a great way to save time because just adding a rucksack to your walk makes a huge calorie difference.

Furthermore, rucking burns nearly as many calories as running. Considering the injury rates of rucking vs. running, the choice might be obvious. If you can stay healthy, you’ll stay active. And staying active is always going to burn more calories.

2. Strengthening your back and shoulders. Improving posture.

Rucking is great for back and shoulder strength. You’ll feel these muscles engaged while rucking, and they might be sore after your first few workouts. Strong shoulders and a strong back keep these areas (so often injured as we get older) healthy. This visible, tangible benefit makes everyday life much less stressful: carrying groceries, mowing the lawn, and moving furniture all depend on healthy, strong shoulder and back muscles. Want functional, daily strength? Pick up a rucksack.

Along with a strong back and durable shoulders, rucking improves posture by pulling your shoulders back as you walk. Your shoulders, back, and neck will be glad you started rucking.

3. Strengthening our bones.

As we age, our bones lose strength and density. Rucking is low impact strength training, so you get the benefits of weight training (strong and dense bones) without the dumbbells and personal trainers. Best of all, you don’t have to ruck every day to improve bone health.

4. Less impact than running.

Our Rucking vs. Running article is a deeper dive into the pros and cons of each exercise, but it’s easy to say rucking is safe and effective for cardiovascular health. While running is often cited as the best cardio exercise, it's much harder on feet, knees, and hips. It’s a high-impact exercise that often sidelines even the most careful runners.

Because rucking is easier on joints, you won't need weeks or months off for injuries.

Stay healthy, keep rucking.

5. Training for anything.

One benefit of rucking is its application to everything else. We call that training for anything. Rucking is Active Resistance Training™, meaning it’s strength and cardio at the same time. It makes you a stronger hiker, runner, paddleboarder, weightlifter, or martial arts student. Anyone who rucks can help friends move furniture without groaning, easily haul luggage through an airport, and spend days exploring new places on foot.

There’s a reason rucking is the preferred training of Army Special Forces.

So if you hate running or working out at a gym (but want the benefits of both), rucking makes your fitness and health goals attainable.

6. Building badass workouts

While just walking with weight can build strong muscles and improve cardio, the fitness benefits of rucking don’t stop there. While rucking, you can include lunges and squats, pushups and planks, and even pullups and dead hangs. Simple exercises like these mixed into your ruck sessions create more intense, sweat-pouring and heart-pounding workouts.

The benefits of rucking alone are numerous, but don’t be afraid to turn it up here and there.

It is good to be strong, and rucking gives us every opportunity.

7. Balancing body composition.

As Michael Easter says in his deep dive on rucking calorie burn, rucking can turn you into “a human weapon,” a machine. It combines endurance and strength to balance body composition. If you’re thin and wiry, rucking adds muscle. Carrying extra weight? Rucking will trim excess weight over time (remember, it burns 3X as many calories as walking).

Rucking really turns us—no matter our age or fitness level—into strength and endurance machines. When this happens, we can go anywhere and do anything.

8. Training upper body and legs at the same time.

Weight training has a knack for getting complicated, but rucking is simple. It effectively trains your upper body, core, and legs, all at the same time. Sound too good to be true? Rucking is the foundation for Army Special Forces training, and is used across the military to build strong, durable men and women. If our most elite servicemembers hold the benefits of rucking in such high regard, you will too. Just check out some rucking testimonials.

9. Natural movement, completely functional fitness

Long before there were ellipticals, fancy running shoes, and big box gyms, there were people carrying things. Meat from a hunt, water from a well, and supplies for days of survival and exploration.

Humans have always carried things.

And carrying things is powerful.

Just ask Michael Easter, whose month-long caribou hunt convinced him that humans are born to carry weight over distance—not run.

Rucking is efficient and useful. It gives us strength, endurance, and character. It physically, mentally, and socially opens the door to feel human in a digital, modern world.

In short, rucking stands apart from other workouts. History and arctic caribou hunts agree.

If you’re ready to test your strength and endurance, start with The GORUCK Challenge.

10. Improved blood sugar regulation.

Dr. Mike Roussell wrote an article about the benefits of rucking after we eat. Our biological systems that manage blood sugar start working after a meal. Sitting around, lying down, and relaxing all sound great afterward, but our bodies can use our help. Even a light ruck after eating primes muscles to pull sugar out of the bloodstream and negates the effects of a sedentary lifestyle.

11. Rucking makes you more capable.

Being capable is all about confidence, dependability, and experience. Rucking (with its many benefits) makes us stronger humans, and that general strength makes us capable. Don’t you want to be capable?

Capable of long walks when your car breaks down, capable of carrying the extra snacks on the family hike, capable of setting an example of health & wellness...

The list goes on.

The confidence, dependability, and experience you reap by rucking will make you a stronger, more capable human.

12. Rucking prepares you for emergencies.

This one makes sense. The worst emergency is one that requires you to trek dozens (or hundreds) of miles to survive, or to save a life. Rucking takes care of that. You’ll be better equipped to handle smaller emergencies—more common nowadays—too. Is your car stuck in snow? Load your belongings onto your back and hike it out. Did your dog hurt his paw? Carry him home.

The Benefits of Rucking: Final Thoughts

The benefits of rucking are numerous, but you don’t get to enjoy them until you’re wearing a rucksack. If you’re new to rucking, check out our beginner’s guide. Remember, it’s easy and free to get started, and you can start wherever you are.