Forget everything you thought you knew about walking 10,000 steps a day being a magic health number. A new comprehensive review published in The Lancet Public Health, led by researchers at the University of Sydney, shows that 7,000 steps daily can deliver major health benefits—almost as much as hitting the 10,000 mark .
Compared to a mostly sedentary baseline of 2,000 steps a day, hitting 7,000 daily steps is associated with significant reductions in a range of serious health risks:
What’s more, researchers noted that, even before reaching 7,000 steps, walking as few as 4,000 steps daily delivers measurable gains over 2,000 steps .
The iconic 10,000-step target actually originated in the 1960s as a marketing gimmick, not based on scientific evidence . While walking 10,000 or more daily steps still confers advantages, especially for some conditions like type 2 diabetes, the incremental health gains beyond 7,000 steps are modest. Experts say setting a realistic, sustainable goal is more important than hitting an arbitrary number.
If you’re currently walking fewer than 7,000 steps a day, here are manageable ways to ramp up:
The message is clear: You don’t need 10,000 steps a day to reap meaningful health gains. According to the research, 7,000 steps daily can cut your risk of chronic disease and early death by nearly half, plus, it’s more practical for most people to achieve and maintain. In short: every step counts, and consistency is key.