If you’ve ever worn a fitness tracker, opened a health app, or even just overheard someone at a coffee shop say “I’ve still got 4,000 steps to go,” chances are you’re familiar with the 10,000-steps-a-day goal. It’s neat, it’s memorable, and it’s everywhere. But it didn’t start as a health recommendation.
It started as a marketing campaign.
Back in the 1960s, a Japanese company launched a pedometer called the “manpo-kei,” which translates to “10,000 step meter.” It was a catchy idea, easy to promote and it stuck.
It’s not the only one. People n the UK were encouraged to follow the “Special K diet,” a cereal company’s invention that had more to do with spiking breakfast cereal sales than promoting health or supporting balanced nutrition.
These ideas often begin with marketing, not medicine.
That doesn’t mean movement isn’t good for us — far from it. But it does mean we need to look a little more closely at the numbers we’ve come to treat as gospel from the era we also thought smoking was good for our health.
Research over the last few years has shown that while physical activity absolutely supports our health and longevity, the magic number might be a little lower than 10,000 steps and far more flexible.
For example, a large study published in 2019 found that benefits like reduced risk of death increased steeply up to around 7,500 steps a day, then plateaued.
Another study in 2023 showed that even small increases in daily steps — just 500 or 1,000 more than usual — were associated with measurable improvements in heart health and longevity.
Even better? It turns out those benefits don’t have to be earned through daily perfection. Taking 8,000 steps just one or two days a week still had a positive impact in one study, and “weekend warriors” ,people who move more intensely only on their days off ,also showed reduced mortality rates. In other words, consistency helps but flexibility matters too.
So what does this mean in practice? It means that going from 2,000 steps a day to 3,500 is a win. It means that a person dealing with chronic illness, joint pain, or caregiving responsibilities shouldn’t be made to feel like they’re failing if 10,000 steps isn’t realistic right now. It means movement is good but shame is not a strategy.
It’s also worth remembering that steps are just one measure of movement. Lifting weights, swimming, dancing in your kitchen, stretching while watching TV — these all count toward your physical wellbeing, even if your step counter doesn’t budge. Beyond movement other things impact our health too: sleep, stress, access to green space, financial stability, community. It’s never just about how many steps we take.
If you enjoy aiming for 10,000 steps a day and it works well for your body and your lifestyle, brilliant — keep going. But if you’re someone who’s felt discouraged or excluded by that number, let this be a little reminder: movement is not a competition, and it’s certainly not a one-size-fits-all prescription.
More steps are generally better, but every step counts. Especially the ones that are kind to your body, your schedule and your life.