Why Pilates Stops Working And What To Do When Your Body Plateaus
Why Pilates Stops Working And What To Do When Your Body Plateaus
If you’ve been doing Pilates consistently, you’re already doing a lot right.
You’ve built a routine, you’re moving regularly, and you’ve likely developed better control and awareness in your body. For many people, Pilates is an excellent starting point and can play a valuable role in long-term movement quality.
But over time, it’s common to reach a point where progress slows.
The sessions stay consistent. The effort is still there. But the results plateau.
If you’ve been wondering why, the answer usually comes down to how your body adapts to training.
Pilates Isn’t the Problem, But It Has Its Limits
Pilates is effective for improving:
· Core stability
· Movement control
· Muscular endurance
These are important components of overall fitness.
However, these adaptations tend to occur relatively early. Once your body becomes efficient at the movements and resistance levels involved, the stimulus is no longer strong enough to drive further change.
This is consistent with the principle of progressive overload, which states that continued improvement requires increasing demand over time (ACSM 2009).
Without progression, the body maintains rather than adapts.
Why Pilates Stops Working Over Time
One of the main limitations of Pilates as a standalone training method is that progression is often limited.
Resistance tends to remain within a relatively narrow range, and while exercises can become more complex, they don’t always provide the increasing load required to build strength.
Research has shown that while Pilates can improve core endurance and flexibility, it produces significantly smaller gains in muscle strength compared to traditional resistance training (Kloubec 2010).
This distinction becomes important when your goals include:
· Changing body composition
· Building lean muscle
· Improving overall strength
These outcomes require higher levels of resistance and structured progression.
Efficiency vs Adaptation
As you continue training in the same way, your body becomes more efficient at those movements.
Efficiency reduces the demand placed on your muscles.
And when demand decreases, so does the need for adaptation.
This is why results plateau, even when consistency remains high.
What’s Missing: Strength Training
To continue progressing, your body needs a different stimulus.
Strength training introduces:
· Progressive overload
· Higher resistance
· Measurable progression
These are the key drivers of long-term physical change.
The Australian Physical Activity Guidelines specifically recommend incorporating muscle-strengthening activities because of their role in improving metabolic health, bone density, and physical function (Department of Health and Aged Care 2021).
This is where strength training becomes essential, not as a replacement for Pilates, but as a complement to it.
Pilates and Strength Training Work Better Together
It’s important to recognise that Pilates and strength training are not competing methods.
They serve different purposes.
Pilates supports:
· Movement quality
· Stability
· Control
Strength training supports:
· Muscle development
· Load tolerance
· Long-term progression
When combined, they create a more balanced and effective approach.
What To Do When You Hit a Plateau
If you’ve reached a point where Pilates no longer feels like it’s delivering results, the solution is not to abandon it entirely.
It’s to add what’s missing.
Introducing structured strength training allows you to:
· Build strength progressively
· Challenge your body in new ways
· Continue adapting
At the same time, Pilates can remain part of your routine, supporting recovery and movement quality.
Where CGPT Fits In
Many of our clients come to CGPT after doing Pilates for years.
They’ve built consistency and a strong foundation, but they’ve reached a point where progress has stalled.
What they need is not more effort, but a more structured approach.
At CGPT, the focus is on:
· Personalised strength training
· Progressive programming
· Building confidence with weights
Some clients continue Pilates alongside their training. Others transition more fully.
Both approaches can work.
The difference is having a plan that allows you to keep progressing.
What To Do Next
If you’ve been doing Pilates and feel like your results have plateaued, this is often the point where a small shift creates a significant change.
You don’t need to start over.
You just need to introduce the right stimulus.
We offer a free intro session at CGPT, where we:
· Talk through your current routine
· Assess where you’re at
· Show you how we would structure your training
You can read more about what to expect here:
https://www.chrisgympt.com/what-to-expect-at-your-first-personal-training-session-at-cgpt-and-why-its-different-to-every-other-gym
From there, you can decide what feels right.
Ready to find out more? Email Andrea.
REFERENCES:
American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) 2009, Progression Models in Resistance Training for Healthy Adults, Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise.
Department of Health and Aged Care 2021, Australian Physical Activity and Sedentary Behaviour Guidelines, Australian Government.
Kloubec, JA 2010, Pilates for improvement of muscle endurance, flexibility, balance, and posture, Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research.




