Updated
Updated · Grazia USA · May 18
Research Puts Walking Sweet Spot at 8,000-9,700 Steps, Undercutting 10,000-Step Rule
Updated
Updated · Grazia USA · May 18

Research Puts Walking Sweet Spot at 8,000-9,700 Steps, Undercutting 10,000-Step Rule

1 articles · Updated · Grazia USA · May 18
  • 8,000 to 9,700 daily steps appears to capture most cardiovascular and weight-management benefits, with gains flattening beyond that range, according to recent research.
  • A 2019 Harvard-led trial found 7,500 steps gave older women the same survival benefit as 10,000, while a 12-year U.S. study in people with hypertension linked each extra 1,000 steps to a 9% lower overall death risk.
  • That target equals roughly 3.8 to 4.8 miles and about 300 to 400 calories burned—enough to support about 1 pound of weekly weight loss when paired with mindful eating.
  • The research emphasizes consistency over a single long walk: the distance can be split across the day, and cycling or water exercise can substitute for some steps for people with joint pain.
  • The broader takeaway is that the popular 10,000-step benchmark is not a medical threshold; moderate, sustainable walking delivers most of the health payoff.
Does the pace of your walk matter more for your health than the total number of steps you take?
The 10,000-step goal was just marketing, so what is the real number you need for a longer life?