Convert Steps to Miles Based on Your Height
Your height determines your step length, and step length determines how many steps fit in a mile. The formula is Step length = Height (m) × 0.415 for walking, and a mile is a fixed 1,609.344 metres — so steps per mile is 1,609.344 divided by your step length. A 160 cm person needs about 2,424 steps per mile, while a 190 cm person needs only about 2,041. Enter your height in the calculator above (it opens on the height field and defaults to miles) for the most accurate steps-to-miles conversion.
Steps per Mile by Height Chart
The chart below shows how steps per mile and the distance of a 10,000-step day change across heights, using the walking stride factor of 0.415.
| Height (cm) | Step length (m) | Steps per mile | Distance (mi) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 150 | 0.623 | 2,585 | 3.87 |
| 160 | 0.664 | 2,424 | 4.13 |
| 170 | 0.706 | 2,281 | 4.38 |
| 180 | 0.747 | 2,154 | 4.64 |
| 190 | 0.789 | 2,041 | 4.90 |
| 200 | 0.830 | 1,939 | 5.16 |
The spread — from over 1,700 steps per mile for shorter walkers down to around 1,500 for taller ones — is why a single "2,000 steps per mile" rule of thumb can be off by 15–25% for you personally. A height-based figure removes that error.
How to Measure Your Step Length
To fine-tune beyond the height estimate, mark a start line, walk 20 natural steps, and measure the distance in metres. Divide by 20 to get your step length, then enter it as a custom stride in the calculator. Repeat at a jog or run to capture your longer strides for those activities.
- Walk 20 steps at your normal pace on a flat surface.
- Measure start-to-finish distance in metres.
- Divide by 20 for your average step length.
- Enter it as a custom stride for a mile-perfect conversion.
Why Height-Based Miles Are More Accurate
Generic converters assume one stride for everyone, so they misjudge distance for anyone much taller or shorter than average. Over a week of walking, that error can add up to several miles. Matching the conversion to your height keeps your mileage honest — useful for training logs, weight management and step challenges. For gender-based defaults instead, see steps to miles for men and steps to miles for women.
