10,000 steps is the most famous walking goal in the world — but it did not come from a lab. It traces back to a 1965 Japanese pedometer marketed as manpo-kei, literally "10,000-steps meter". The round number stuck, and while research shows real benefits well below it, 10,000 remains a great, motivating daily target.
How Far Is 10,000 Steps in Kilometers?
10,000 steps is approximately 7.62 km for an average man (based on a 0.762 m walking step length) and about 6.70 km for an average woman (0.67 m step length). In miles, that is roughly 4.73 and 4.16 respectively. Your exact distance depends on your height and stride, so enter your details in the calculator above for a personalized figure.
10,000 Steps: Distance, Time, and Calories
Walking 10,000 steps at a normal pace of about 5 km/h covers roughly 7.62 km and takes around 1 h 31 min. A 70 kg person burns approximately 373 calories doing so. Because each jogging or running stride is longer than a walking step, the same 10,000 steps covers more ground — and burns more calories — at higher intensity, as the table below shows.
| Body Weight | Walking (MET 3.5) | Jogging (MET 7) | Running (MET 11.5) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 60 kg | 320 kcal | 530 kcal | 686 kcal |
| 70 kg | 373 kcal | 619 kcal | 801 kcal |
| 80 kg | 427 kcal | 707 kcal | 915 kcal |
| 90 kg | 480 kcal | 795 kcal | 1,029 kcal |
| 100 kg | 533 kcal | 884 kcal | 1,144 kcal |
10,000 Steps in KM by Height
Taller people cover more distance per step, so 10,000 steps is farther for them. The table below uses the walking stride formula (height in metres × 0.415) to show how the distance changes with height.
| Height (cm) | Step length (m) | Distance (km) | Distance (mi) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 155 | 0.643 | 6.43 | 4.00 |
| 165 | 0.685 | 6.85 | 4.25 |
| 175 | 0.726 | 7.26 | 4.51 |
| 185 | 0.768 | 7.68 | 4.77 |
| 195 | 0.809 | 8.09 | 5.03 |
How Many Steps Is That per Kilometer?
At an average walking step length of 0.762 m it takes about 1,312 steps to walk one kilometer, so 10,000 steps works out to roughly 7.62 km. Shorter strides mean more steps per kilometer; taller walkers need fewer. Use the height field above to see your personal steps-per-kilometer rate, and try switching the activity to jogging or running to see how the distance grows.
