
The goal of walking 10,000 steps a day has long been built into smartwatches and fitness trackers. But contrary to popular belief, the number is not a medical standard. It originated as a marketing benchmark — and modern research shows health benefits begin well before that point.
Where the 10,000-step goal came from
The 10,000-step target first appeared in Japan in the 1960s, when a pedometer manufacturer introduced a device called the manpokei, which translates to «10,000 steps meter.» The figure was intended to encourage people to walk more.
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Over time, the number became embedded in popular culture and later adopted as a default goal in many health and fitness apps. Research since then has shown that meaningful health benefits begin with fewer steps — and, in fact, with almost any increase in daily movement.
Is there an ideal number?
Studies suggest a noticeable reduction in the risk of premature death begins at roughly 6,000 to 8,000 steps per day for middle-aged adults. Among older adults, significant benefits appear at about 4,000 to 6,000 steps per day.

After a certain point, gains begin to level off. Additional steps still provide benefits, but the improvements become smaller.
What determines your daily target
The optimal number of steps varies depending on age, baseline fitness, cardiovascular health and body weight. Experts also emphasize that intensity matters, not just total steps. A faster walking pace is generally linked to better health outcomes.
If 10,000 steps feels unrealistic
Even modest increases in activity — adding 1,000 to 2,000 steps above your usual daily level — can improve overall fitness. Consistency matters more than reaching a specific number.
The body responds to regular movement rather than a perfect daily target.
A realistic guideline
There is no universal step count that works for everyone. For many people, however, 7,000 to 8,000 steps per day represents a practical, research-backed goal.
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Lifestyle, health status and available time all play a role. What matters most is simple: moving more is always better than not moving at all.