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Walking ranked best exercise for longevity: Check other expert-ranked moves to boost lifelong health

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| etimes.in | Last updated on - Aug 21, 2025, 09:26 IST
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1/8

Exercises for long lives

They say we cannot add more years to life, but we can add more life to our years—and the way we move often decides which path we take. Exercise, after all, is not just about stronger muscles or a leaner frame; it is one of the most powerful signals we send to our body about how long and how well we want to live. From ancient healers who prescribed walking as medicine to modern science proving how movement reshapes our cells, history keeps reminding us that exercise is the closest thing we have to a “longevity pill.”

It is in this context that Dr. Jonathan Schoeff, a longevity expert and surgeon, explains and ranks 7 common exercises, on Instagram, which can help support longevity and healthy life.

2/8

Jump rope: 7/10

Jumping rope is short, cheap, and brutally effective at getting your heart rate up and melting calories. Ten minutes of steady rope work trains coordination, ankle and calf resilience, and quick cardio bursts that improve fitness without needing much space. Studies show rope-skipping can improve cardiometabolic markers and VO₂ responses when done in short high-intensity or longer steady bouts, making it a versatile cardio tool whether you’re time-crunched or building conditioning.

3/8

Dead lift: 9/10

Deadlifts are the poster child for posterior-chain strength: hamstrings, glutes, lower back and the whole core coordinate to lift a heavy load. That “workhorse” action translates directly into better posture, safer everyday lifting, stronger hips, and higher bone-loading stimulus, all of which protect against frailty and fractures as we age. Evidence from resistance-training reviews shows heavy strength work improves muscle strength, power, and functional outcomes in older adults; posterior-chain–focused programs also reduce pain and disability in many patients.

4/8

Squats: 10/10

Squats are the "gold standard" for lower-body capacity. Since they get the the quads, glutes, hamstrings, calves and core- it translates into safer stair climbs, easier sitting/standing, better balance and a lower fall risk, huge wins for longevity and independence. For aging bodies, regular squatting preserves the baseline strength you need for daily life. Form and progressive loading keep it safe and effective.

5/8

Walking especially brisk: 10/10

Walking is the most accessible longevity habit: it’s low-impact, daily-friendly and cumulative. Large cohort studies show a dose-response between steps and mortality — benefits rise steeply up to roughly 6,000–8,000 daily steps, with brisk walking adding extra cardiovascular value. Brisk pace increases heart-rate zones and insulin sensitivity more than slow ambulation, yet it remains gentle on joints.

6/8

Stair climbing: 10/10

Stair climbing brings power and cardio together in a simple, time-efficient package. Repeated flights raise VO₂peak, improve leg strength and shift cardiometabolic markers (blood pressure, lipids, insulin sensitivity) within weeks of regular practice. Because it’s steeper intensity than flat walking, stair work often lands you in the “zone 2” or higher sustained cardio ranges that build aerobic base and mitochondrial fitness, central mechanisms for longevity.

7/8

Stretching routine: 9.5/10

Don’t skip mobility: regular stretching preserves range of motion, improves gait and balance, and reduces soft-tissue stiffness that raises injury risk. Flexibility work supports better squat and hinge mechanics, reduces compensatory patterns, and makes strength gains more usable in daily life.

8/8

Sled pushes: 10/10

Sled pushes are a deceptively simple, brutally effective blend of strength and metabolic conditioning. Pushing a weighted sled engages the posterior chain and quads while producing a high heart-rate response — in other words, simultaneous strength and cardio work. Research on resisted sled training shows improvements in anaerobic capacity, power and overall work output; more applied studies and field tests report meaningful metabolic stress that translates to calorie burn and conditioning. For longevity programming, sleds are an excellent tool when combined with measured recovery and progressive overload.

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