Last week, one of my meekest, weakest friends (said with love) asked me to go boxing with her. This may have been wildly out-of-character for her, but for me, it confirmed a trend I’d already been noticing. Boxing, Jiu-Jitsu, Muay Thai, and all other sorts of combat-style workout classes are having a mainstream moment. In many ways, this is nothing new—how could I erase the legacy of Tae Bo nation?—but I’m not the first to clock an uptick in “fight-style” workouts across social media and gym class offerings these days. So what’s actually driving this trend? And more practically: Even if you’re not planning to step into a ring, what can you take from the way fighters train that’s still worth your time?
Why “combat training” is gaining in popularity
From where I’m standing, I see a few things converging. During the pandemic, a lot of us sought out training that felt purposeful and grounding. At the same time, a generation that grew up watching UFC, combat sports documentaries, and fighter-athlete crossover content on social media is now arriving at adulthood culturally primed for this kind of training. As a result, it looks like influencers, personal trainers, and fitness studios are simply recognizing a market opportunity. Now, workouts like boxing and kickboxing are accessible to people who never would have set foot in a traditional fight gym—like my friend and myself.
What I could tell five minutes into my boxing class is that the appeal of combat training goes much deeper than a purely physical workout. Compared to the boredom that can come from a typical gym circuit, “fighter-style training is different,” says Tre Hubbard, a former college football player who lost over 120 pounds and went on to become a Golden Gloves boxing champion. “You’re not just working out—you’re learning how to move, how to breathe, how to stay composed when you’re tired,” Hubbard says. “You can’t fake it.”
Even for those of us with no plans to fight for real, “combat-style training is super popular now because it makes people feel strong, capable, and engaged,” says Terry Tateossian, a certified personal trainer who incorporates combat-style methods into her coaching programs. “There is a sense of capability and confidence,” Tateossian says.
As a long-distance runner myself, something I’ve always noticed in the gym is how so many modern fitness options are designed to make things easier. Machines guide your movement, screens distract you, and so on. Now, there’s a real appetite for the way combat-style training strips all that noise away. “People are looking for engagement and intention,” Tateossian says.
Training like a fighter “gives you a sense of progress that feels real,” Hubbard says. “You’re sharper, faster, more conditioned, and mentally tougher. It’s one of the few types of training where your confidence actually grows because you know you’re earning it.” And if you’re learning how to throw a proper jab, or move your feet correctly, or time a defensive slip, your mind really does need to be present.
Why training like a fighter is such a good workout
From a purely physical standpoint, combat training covers a lot of ground. A single boxing session might include dynamic warm-ups, shadowboxing, heavy bag work, pad work, footwork drills, and conditioning circuits. “You’re hitting conditioning, strength, coordination, and endurance all at once without having to overthink it,” Hubbard says. Compare that to a standard gym session where you might spend 45 minutes on isolated muscle groups and finish on a treadmill.
Tateossian shares some of her favorite physical benefits in more detail. Rotational power—the kind you generate by kicking or punching—builds core strength. Footwork drills train balance, agility, and reaction time, qualities that translate directly to injury prevention and everyday physical capability. And for her specific clientele—women over 40—Tateossian finds combat-style training particularly valuable for preserving fast-twitch muscle fibers, which decline with age and are critical for power, reaction speed, and the ability to catch yourself if you stumble. “There’s also a mental component that also keeps people present,” Tateossian says. “And it feels more like ‘learning a skill’ rather than ‘working out,’ which increases consistency.”
Consistency, of course, is the variable that determines almost everything in fitness. “The biggest thing it gave me was structure,” Hubbard says. “It gave me something to commit to when nothing else was working.” After all, the best fitness program in the world doesn’t work if you don’t show up.
How to get started with combat training
None of this means you should walk into a combat gym tomorrow and sign up for full-contact sparring right away. “Getting too intense too quickly can lead to injuries, fatigue, and it’s not really for beginners,” Tateossian says. The intensity that makes this workout effective is also what makes it risky if you skip a proper build-up phase.
The good news is that you don’t need to spar, compete, or even take a punch to capture most of the benefits. The majority of what makes fighter training so valuable is available to anyone willing to learn the basics properly. If you’re interested in fighter-style training, start with fundamentals. Find a coach or class that can teach you things like bag work, footwork, and conditioning circuits.
In a fitness landscape full of shortcuts and hacks, training like a fighter could be exactly what you need to regain a little structure and intentionality. Just keep in mind that your goals here should be more than just burning calories—even though, in my experience, you should also be ready to burn a lot of calories.










