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How Many Steps a Day Do You Really Need?

walking steps daily – man and woman walking briskly in sportswear for fitness
Last updated: June 2026

How Many Steps a Day Do You Really Need?

The 10,000-steps-a-day target appears on nearly every fitness tracker and smartphone app as the default goal. It was not set by doctors or researchers — it originated in a 1965 Japanese marketing campaign for a pedometer called the Manpo-kei, which translates literally to “10,000-step meter.” The target is a round number that caught on globally, but science now offers a more precise and more achievable answer to how many steps you actually need.

Find Your Personal Daily Step Target

The steps-per-day calculator gives you a personalised step goal based on your age, current activity level, and health objectives — not a generic 10,000-step default.

Calculate My Step Goal →

What the Research Says

The most comprehensive analysis to date is a 2025 meta-analysis published in Exercise and Sport Sciences Reviews by the Steps for Health Collaborative, which pooled data from over 125,000 adults across 17 studies on all-cause mortality and 11 studies on cardiovascular disease. The findings show a clear curvilinear dose-response: risk drops steeply at lower step counts and the curve begins to flatten at higher ones.

Key conclusions from that analysis:

A 2020 JAMA study of 4,840 U.S. adults also found that those who took 8,000 steps per day had a 50% lower risk of dying from any cause over a decade compared to those who took 4,000 steps. Those who took 12,000 steps per day had a 65% lower risk. Critically, step intensity — how fast you walk — did not independently reduce mortality risk once total daily steps were accounted for. Volume matters more than pace.

Recommended Steps Per Day by Age

Age GroupRecommended Steps/DayNotes
Children (6–17)12,000+CDC recommends 60 min activity/day; ~12,000 steps is the equivalent
Adults under 608,000–10,000Risk plateaus beyond 10,000; every increment from 5,000 upward helps
Adults 60 and older6,000–8,000Lower targets reflect greater energy cost per step with age
Sedentary starting pointAdd 1,000 steps to current averageBiggest gains come at the low end of the curve

The reason older adults need fewer steps to get the same benefit is not that their bodies respond less — it is that each step costs them more physiological effort. A 65-year-old taking 7,000 steps is doing more relative work than a 30-year-old taking 7,000 steps, and the health signal the body receives from that effort is proportionally stronger.

Related Reading

Is 6,000 Steps a Day Good? What It Means by Age and Goal →

How Does 10,000 Steps Compare?

10,000 steps is not harmful — it is simply not the minimum threshold many people assume it to be. For adults under 60, 10,000 steps sits at the high end of the evidence-supported range and provides meaningful benefit. For adults over 60, it exceeds the plateau where additional risk reduction becomes small. In practical terms: if you are 55 and currently taking 5,000 steps per day, getting to 8,000 will produce far more measurable health improvement than eventually reaching 10,000.

The average U.S. adult currently takes approximately 4,000 to 5,000 steps per day — a level classified as “low active” on the Tudor-Locke Activity Index. This means most Americans are working from a baseline where every 1,000 additional steps produces a large relative benefit.

Activity Classification by Step Count

Daily StepsActivity LevelHealth Implication
Under 2,500Basal activityAssociated with significantly elevated cardiometabolic risk
2,500–4,999Limited activitySedentary; higher risk of chronic disease
5,000–7,499Low activeBelow guideline-equivalent; still better than sedentary
7,500–9,999Somewhat activeAssociated with guideline-equivalent MVPA; good target range
10,000–12,499ActiveTop of evidence-supported range for most adults
12,500+Highly activeMay benefit athletes and those with weight-loss goals

This classification system was originally developed by Tudor-Locke and Bassett in 2004 and subsequently validated across multiple population studies. It provides a more granular framework than the binary “reached 10,000 / didn’t reach 10,000” view.

Related Reading

How to Set a Steps Per Day Goal (Based on Your Age and Objective) →

Does Step Intensity Matter?

The 2020 JAMA study specifically tested whether walking pace — measured as steps per minute — independently affected mortality risk. It did not, once total daily steps were controlled for. This is a practically useful finding: getting your steps through multiple slow walks, household activity, and incidental movement produces the same mortality-risk benefit as walking the same total number of steps quickly. If you cannot walk at a brisk pace due to age, injury, or fitness level, accumulating steps at any pace still counts.

That said, walking at a higher cadence (100 steps per minute or faster, which represents moderate intensity) does provide additional cardiovascular training benefits and contributes to the 150 minutes of moderate-intensity activity recommended by the CDC per week. If you can walk briskly for some portion of your daily steps, it adds a training effect on top of the step-count benefit.

Related Reading

Is 15,000 Steps a Day Good? When Higher Targets Make Sense →

How to Increase Your Daily Steps

Research on pedometer-based interventions shows that using a step goal increases daily steps by approximately 2,000 per day on average. The most effective approach is setting a goal slightly above your current daily average — certified trainer guidance suggests adding 500 to 1,000 steps per week as a sustainable increment. Jumps of 3,000+ steps overnight tend to be short-lived.

Practical additions that accumulate steps without requiring a dedicated walk:

Related Reading

Average Steps Per Day for Men: How You Compare by Age →

Get Your Personalised Step Target

Instead of defaulting to 10,000 steps, use the calculator to find the right daily step goal for your age, current fitness level, and specific health objective.

Calculate My Step Goal →
Dennis Kiplimo
Written by
Dennis Kiplimo

Dennis Kiplimo is a Registered Nurse and founder of Denstar Fitness. He publishes fitness calculators and writes about training, nutrition and health on Medium.

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