Bruised Legs After Exercising? Here's What Your Body's Trying to Tell You

First, What Are Bruises and How Do They Happen?
Why You Have Exercise-Induced Bruising in Your Legs
You Worked Out for a Long Time
You Hit Your Leg on Something During Your Workout
You're Getting Older
You're Taking Certain Medications
You Have an Underlying Health Condition
Reducing Workout Bruising
When to See a Doctor
The Takeaway
- It’s not uncommon to have bruised legs after exercising, particularly following contact sports or intense workouts that cause muscle fatigue and strain.
- Bruises, which can occur subcutaneously (under the skin), in muscle, and in bone, happen when blood vessels break and cause blood to leak into tissues, usually causing discoloration of the skin.
- Long and intense workouts, blunt trauma, aging, your medication regimen, and underlying health conditions are all possible reasons for post-workout bruising.
- Talk to your doctor if bruising can’t be explained by obvious causes, and seek medical attention if you have rapid swelling along with bruising, as you may need immediate treatment.
- Muscle Contusion. Cleveland Clinic. May 23, 2023.
- Mayo Clinic Staff. Easy Bruising: Why Does It Happen? Mayo Clinic. May 30, 2025.
- Why Do You Bruise After Working Out? Exercise-Related Bruising Causes and Prevention. Community Strength Austin. August 29, 2024.
- Bruise. Mount Sinai.
- Contusions: Overview, Types, and Treatment. TrustCare. March 15, 2021.
- Bone Bruise (Bone Contusion). Cleveland Clinic. February 13, 2024.
- Witstein JR et al. Muscle Strains in the Thigh. OrthoInfo. June 2024.
- Bruises (Ecchymosis). Cleveland Clinic. January 26, 2023.
- Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome. Cleveland Clinic. June 16, 2023.
- Mayo Clinic Staff. Bruise: First Aid. Mayo Clinic. April 17, 2024.
- Witstein JR et al. Muscle Contusion (Bruise). OrthoInfo. December 2024.

Natalia Johnsen, MD
Medical Reviewer
Natalia Johnsen, MD, practices internal medicine and lifestyle medicine. She works as an internist for the Vancouver Clinic in Vancouver, Washington.
Johnsen trained and worked as ob-gyn in Russia before coming to the United States in 2000. Subsequently, she interned in internal medicine at the University of Nevada and completed her residency at a Stanford-affiliated program in Santa Clara, California. After that she worked as a general internist for two years before to switching to full-time hospital work.
Johnsen has always been fascinated by the effects that lifestyle can have on physical and mental health, and she fell in love with the concept of lifestyle medicine as a specialty after seeing patients struggle with issues that could have been prevented had they known more about a healthy lifestyle. To make an impact on her patients through lifestyle interventions, she launched her own lifestyle medicine clinic, Vivalso Health and Longevity.

Solomon Branch
Author
Solomon Branch specializes in nutrition, health, acupuncture, herbal medicine and integrative medicine. He has a B.A. in English from George Mason University, as well as a master's degree in traditional Chinese medicine.