Physical exercise benefits Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients but the mechanism is unclear. Cannabinoid receptor type 1 (CB1R) is known to be reduced in PD patients and animal models. We test the hypothesis that binding of the CB1R inverse agonist, [3H]SR141716A, is normalized by treadmill exercise in the toxin-induced 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) model of PD. Male rats had unilateral striatal injections of 6-OHDA or saline. After 15 days, half were submitted to treadmill exercise and half remained sedentary. [3H]SR141716A autoradiography was performed in postmortem tissue from striatum, substantia nigra (SN) and hippocampus. There was a 41% decrease of [3H]SR141716A specific binding in the ipsilateral SN of 6-OHDA-injected sedentary animals which was attenuated to 15% by exercise, when compared to saline-injected animals. No striatal differences were observed. A 30% bilateral hippocampal increase was observed in both healthy and 6-OHDA exercised groups. In addition, a positive correlation between nigral [3H]SR141716A binding and nociceptive threshold was observed in PD-exercised animals (p = 0.0008), suggesting a beneficial effect of exercise in the pain associated with the model. Chronic exercise can reduce the detrimental effects of PD on nigral [3H]SR141716A binding, similar to the reported reduction after dopamine replacement therapy, so should be considered as an adjunct therapy for PD.