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The way you walk: 10–15 minute bouts of walking better for your cardiovascular health than shorter strolls

Walking 10-15 minutes in a single stretch more beneficial than walking less than five minutes in one go

2025-10-27
(Press-News.org) The way you walk: 10–15 minute bouts of walking better for your cardiovascular health than shorter strolls 

People who walk at least 10-15 minutes in a single stretch reduce their risk of developing cardiovascular disease by two thirds compared to those who walk less than five minutes in one go 

When walking the same number of steps, longer accumulations of steps in one go have a greater health benefit than short bouts spread out across the day 

 

An international study led by experts at the University of Sydney and the Universidad Europea in Spain has found that longer periods of continuous walking are more beneficial to cardiovascular health than walking the same number of steps in shorter, more sporadic bouts. 

 

The study published in the Annals of International Medicine analysed the impact of walking on the health of physically inactive people.  

 

The results showed that among those who took fewer than 8000 steps per day, those who accumulate most of their steps across one or two walks lasting at least 10-15 minutes or longer have a lower risk of mortality and cardiovascular events (such as a heart attack or stroke) compared to those who take their steps in very short bouts of less than five minutes. 

 

Co-lead author Dr Matthew Ahmadi, Deputy Director of the Mackenzie Wearables Research Hub and member of the Charles Perkins Centre at the University of Sydney said: “For the most inactive people, switching from brief walks here and there to longer continuous walks may come with some health benefits.  

 

“There is a perception that health professionals have recommended walking 10,000 steps a day is the goal, but this isn't necessary. Simply adding one or two longer walks per day, each lasting at least 10-15 minutes at a comfortable but steady pace, may have significant benefits – especially for people who don’t walk much.” 

 

The study analysed 33,560 adults aged between 40-79 years who walked less than 8000 steps a day and had no cardiovascular disease or cancer at baseline.  

 

Participants wore a research wristband for a week which measured not only how many steps they took but also how their step count was accumulated. Following the participants’ health outcomes over the course of an average of eight years, the researchers found:  

 

People who walked continuously for 10-15 minutes per day had a 4 percent chance of having a cardiovascular related event such as heart attack or stroke. Meanwhile those who walked continuously for only 5 minutes a day had a 13 percent risk of having a cardiovascular incident.  

The health benefits of continuous bouts of walking were most pronounced among the least active, for example those who walked 5000 steps a day or less. Among this group, the risk of developing cardiovascular disease halved from 15 percent for those who walked up to 5 minutes a day, to 7 percent for those who walked up to 15 minutes a day. 

Among the most sedentary group (5000 steps a day or less) the risk of death dropped from 5 percent for those who walked in 5 minutes stretches during the day, to less than 1 percent for those who walked up to 15 minutes a day.  

 

Senior author Professor Emmanuel Stamatakis, Director of the Mackenzie Wearables Research Hub and physical activity theme leader at the Charles Perkins Centre said: “We tend to place all the emphasis on the number of steps or the total amount of walking but neglect the crucial role of patterns, for example ‘how’ walking is done.  

 

“This study shows that even people who are very physically inactive can maximise their heart health benefit by tweaking their walking patterns to walk for longer at a time, ideally for at least 10-15 minutes, when possible.” 

 

Co-lead author Dr Borja del Pozo from the Universidad Europea said: “Our research shows that simple changes can make all the difference to your health. If you walk a little, set aside some time to walk more often and in longer sessions. Such small changes can have a big impact." 

 

-ENDS- 

 

Research:  

del Pozo, B*., Ahmadi, M*., Sabag, A., Saint, Maurice P.F., Lee, I-M., Stamatakis, E., ‘Step accumulation patterns and risk of cardiovascular events and mortality amongst sub-optimally active adults’ (Annals of International Medicine, 2025) 

DOI: 10.7326/ANNALS-25-01547  

*Equally contributing joint co-lead authors 

 

Declaration: 

UK Biobank is a large-scale biomedical database and research resource containing anonymised genetic, lifestyle and health information from half a million UK participants. UK Biobank’s database, which includes blood samples, heart and brain scans and genetic data of the volunteer participants, is globally accessible to approved researchers who are undertaking health-related research that’s in the public interest. 

 

UK Biobank’s resource was opened for research use in April 2012. Since then 30000 researchers from 100 countries have been approved to use it and more than 5000 peer-reviewed papers that used the resource have now been published. 

 

Media enquiries:  

Professor Emmanuel Stamatakis  

emmanuel.stamatakis@sydney.edu.au  

Dr Matthew Ahmadi  

matthew.ahmadi@sydney.edu.au 

Luisa Low, Senior Media and PR Adviser 

luisa.low@sydney.edu.au | +61 438 021 390

Outside of work hours: please call +61 2 8627 0246 (directs to a mobile number) or email media.office@sydney.edu.au   

END


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[Press-News.org] The way you walk: 10–15 minute bouts of walking better for your cardiovascular health than shorter strolls
Walking 10-15 minutes in a single stretch more beneficial than walking less than five minutes in one go