Turn your living space into a movement-friendly environment using everyday household items and natural break points in your remote workday.
Working from home removes your commute — and often your daily steps with it.
Some workplace research suggests remote workers may take fewer steps per day than office-based colleagues. The walk from car park to building, the trip to a colleague's desk, the lunch run to a nearby café — these incidental movements often shrink when your commute is ten metres from bed to desk. Published studies in journals such as Occupational & Environmental Medicine have reported higher average sitting time among some home-worker groups, though individual routines vary widely.
Home environments also tend to have less ergonomic setup. Kitchen tables are too high. Dining chairs lack lumbar support. Laptops sit below eye level on coffee tables. These factors compound the physical cost of remote work beyond what a simple step count reveals.
The home-based micro-workout plan addresses both problems: it replaces lost incidental movement with structured hourly sessions, and it uses your home environment creatively to add variety that office plans cannot offer. You have access to walls, stairs, doorframes, towels, and water bottles — all legitimate exercise tools when used with proper form and awareness.
No gym membership required — your home already has what you need.
Chair-supported split squats, tricep dips, seated leg extensions, and incline push-ups with hands on the seat. Choose a dining chair that does not roll or slide on your floor.
Wall sits for quadriceps endurance, doorframe chest stretches for rounded shoulders, and single-leg balance with fingertip wall support for ankle stability.
A filled water bottle becomes a light weight for lateral raises and bicep curls. A rolled towel placed behind your lower back improves seated posture during work blocks.
Two-minute stair climbs between meetings, hallway walking lunges, and calf raises on the bottom step. Use handrails for balance during lunge sequences.
Rotate these four sessions through your day, matching them to natural break points.
Tip: Link sessions to existing habits. Do your kitchen counter session while waiting for the kettle to boil. Do your stair session after every second video call. Habit stacking makes consistency far easier than relying on willpower alone.
Home-focused workshops and online sessions for remote workers.
Virtual session covering micro-workout integration around video calls, childcare, and household tasks. Includes downloadable exercise reference card.
Full-day event with ergonomic assessments, movement demonstrations, and peer discussion groups for home-based professionals across New Zealand.