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• Getting Started (under 4,000 steps/day) — Still better than sedentary. Modest improvements in mood and blood pressure begin at even low step counts.
• Building Momentum (around 5,000 steps/day) — The threshold where cardiovascular benefits become clinically significant, with measurable reductions in heart disease and metabolic risk.
• Finding Your Stride (around 7,000 steps/day) — A landmark JAMA study found 7,000 daily steps cuts all-cause mortality risk by 50–70% compared to low-step peers. Cognitive protection against dementia begins here.
• Active Walker (around 8,000 steps/day) — Benefits continue to compound: stronger immune function, better bone density, and meaningful mental health gains.
• Peak Pacer (10,000+ steps/day) — Maximum cardiovascular efficiency. Research shows health gains plateau around this level, so this is the sweet spot — more steps beyond it don’t add proportionally more benefit.
The bottom line: The steepest health returns happen at the low end of the curve. Every step added matters most when you’re just getting started.