
Ask ten parents how much exercise a kid needs and you'll get ten different answers. The good news: the research is clearer than the playground folklore.
What the guidelines actually say
Most pediatric health organizations recommend at least 60 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous activity per day for children aged 6 to 17. Translated into steps, studies consistently land in the range of 10,000 to 14,000 steps a day for 6-to-11-year-olds — noticeably more than the 8,000-to-10,000 figure usually quoted for adults.
Don't treat the number as a pass/fail test. Kids' activity arrives in bursts — recess sprints, trampoline sessions, sudden living-room dance breaks — and the daily total swings naturally from day to day.
Make it a streak, not a lecture
- Set the goal together — kids defend targets they helped pick.
- Celebrate streaks (three days in a row!) instead of single big days.
- Match steps to stories: 12,000 steps ≈ walking the length of 100 soccer fields.
- Let them check their own wrist. Self-tracking beats parent-nagging every time.
Where a tracker helps (and where it doesn't)
A kids' fitness tracker shines as a feedback toy: the buzz at goal completion, the filling ring, the streak counter. What it shouldn't become is a surveillance tool. Keep the numbers between your child and their wrist, peek at the weekly trend together, and let the daily details stay theirs.




