The VerdictMODERATE CONVICTION

Real overtraining is rare, takes months, and has no test.

Tonight, ask yourself: the last time you felt "overtrained," had you actually been eating enough and sleeping enough? If not, that's your answer before you cut a single session.

  1. The number that changed my mind: there is no blood test, hormone, or HRV reading that can diagnose overtraining. Every marker ever tried has failed as an individual test.
  2. What most people get wrong: feeling wrecked after a hard week is usually the plan working, not a warning sign. Real overtraining takes months to build.
  3. Start here: when you feel overtrained, fix your food and sleep before you cut training. That solves it nine times out of ten.

Your body is like a phone battery. A hard training block runs it down on purpose, and a normal rest charges it back past full. Overtraining syndrome is what happens when you keep draining it for months without ever plugging in. Most "overtrained" people just forgot to charge (food and sleep), they didn't break the battery.

SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.

Truth Engine · Recovery

Are You Actually Overtrained?

Real overtraining is rare, takes months to develop, and no single test can diagnose it. Most "overtraining" is just under-recovery.

Conviction: Moderate

The Practical Takeaway

Practical steps for managing training fatigue

Tonight, ask yourself: the last time you felt "overtrained," had you actually been eating enough and sleeping enough?

If the honest answer is no, that's your answer, before you cut a single session.

Takes 30 seconds. No equipment needed.

Conviction summary graphic

Conviction

Moderate (endpoint-stratified)
True overtraining is rare and a diagnosis of exclusionHIGH
No single validated diagnostic marker existsHIGH
Published prevalence figures are unreliableHIGH
The fatigue-to-syndrome continuum is real and usefulMOD-HIGH
Serial monitoring against your own baseline as best practiceMODERATE
Much "overtraining" is misdiagnosed under-fuellingMODERATE
Any single marker (heart-rate, hormones) as a stand-alone testLOW
What would change "there's no diagnostic marker"?
A large study (300+ athletes across endurance and strength sports) that tracks a fixed panel through real training blocks and shows one marker, or a combination, reliably flags the slide into overtraining before performance collapses. That would turn "no test" into "we finally have one."
What would change "much of it is just under-fuelling"?
A study that fully corrects athletes' energy intake first and measures how many "overtraining" cases resolve. If most don't clear up with proper fuelling, the under-eating explanation would weaken and overtraining would look more like its own distinct problem.

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The Full Picture — Evidence, Debate & Nuance

What Most People Think

The common belief about overtraining

"Overtraining" gets used for any stretch of feeling tired, flat, or unmotivated after hard training. People assume there's a clear line you cross, and probably a test (cortisol, testosterone, heart-rate variability) that proves you've crossed it. The belief is that overtraining is both common and measurable.

What the Evidence Actually Shows

What the research shows about overtraining

It's a continuum, not a switch. The sports-medicine consensus (Meeusen 2013) describes three stages. Functional overreaching is a short performance dip from a hard block that then rebounds higher, which is the goal of a hard block, not a problem. Nonfunctional overreaching is stagnation that takes weeks to clear with no rebound. Overtraining syndrome is a long-term performance collapse with whole-body symptoms lasting months. STRONG MOD-HIGH

True overtraining syndrome is rare and a diagnosis of exclusion. There is no gold-standard test, so it can only be diagnosed by ruling out everything else (low iron, thyroid problems, infection, depression, under-eating) and confirming a long performance decline (Carrard scoping review 2022). STRONG HIGH

No single validated marker exists. Heart-rate variability (7 athletes), basal hormones and the testosterone-to-cortisol ratio (51 athletes), oxidative stress, blood viscosity and immune markers have all been floated. Each separates groups on average in a small study, then fails to give a reliable yes or no for the individual in front of you. STRONG HIGH

Performance decrement is the one consistent objective sign, and the only strategy with consensus support is tracking each athlete against their own baseline: performance, mood, sleep, resting heart rate and illness frequency, not a population cutoff. MODERATE MODERATE

A large share of "overtraining" is misdiagnosed under-fuelling. Overtraining and RED-S (low energy availability) overlap heavily, both starting from the same hormonal disruption driven by too little energy or carbohydrate. Many negative "overtraining" outcomes, including low testosterone in male athletes, are primarily under-eating (Stellingwerff and Heikura 2021). MODERATE MODERATE

The Debate

Is overtraining a detectable condition?

Older biomarker literature, 1990s–2010s
Overtraining is a discrete, detectable condition. Individual studies found altered cortisol, adrenaline (Fry 1994), blood viscosity (2006), oxidative stress (2010) and heart-rate variability (Mourot 2004) in overtrained athletes.
vs
2021–2022 scoping & systematic reviews
Overtraining has no validated marker and stays a diagnosis of exclusion. The Carrard scoping review (2022) mapped every proposed marker and found none reproduced or validated ahead of time.

The reviews have the stronger position. Decades of small single-marker studies each found a difference, but none replicated as an individual diagnostic. The field has moved from "find the one test" to monitoring each athlete against their own baseline.

Honest Limitations

LAB vs REAL WORLD

The lab: Controlled overload studies in elite endurance athletes detect overreaching with multi-test panels.
Real world: Almost all evidence is national-squad, triathlete or military samples under deliberately extreme load, and you can't ethically induce real overtraining, so samples are tiny (7 to 51 people).
Be MORE skeptical

LAB vs REAL WORLD

The lab: Markers separate overtrained from healthy groups.
Real world: Every usable marker only works as a change from that person's own baseline. Without prior data, a one-off reading tells you almost nothing.
Need a baseline

The Nuance

The subtleties the simple answer misses

"Overtraining" in everyday speech and "overtraining syndrome" in the literature are not the same thing. The clinical syndrome is rare; the everyday tiredness is common and usually harmless.

The biggest practical trap is treating low testosterone in an under-fuelled male athlete with testosterone replacement. In that situation, low testosterone is usually a downstream effect of under-eating. Fix the energy first and refer before prescribing.

Published prevalence figures (roughly 7 to 20 percent, and higher in some endurance groups) are unreliable, because they mix ordinary overreaching, burnout and the true syndrome under inconsistent older definitions. Treat any specific prevalence number with suspicion.

Sources

This is an evidence summary, not medical advice. Persistent fatigue and performance loss have many causes. If yours isn't clearing with rest, food and sleep, see a doctor to rule out medical causes.

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