Getting More Variety in Your Exercise Routine Could Extend Your Life

Becoming a jack of all trades in the gym might be one of the keys to living a longer, healthier life, a new study suggests.
“The takeaway is refreshingly practical: Don’t put all your movement eggs in one basket,” says Mark Kovacs, PhD, an exercise physiologist based in Atlanta who has researched longevity and athletic performance, but wasn’t involved in the study. “You don’t need extreme workouts or complex programming. Simple variety goes a long way.”
What the Study Found
Researchers looked at data from more than 111,000 healthcare professionals, women and men, who were involved in the Nurses’ Health Study and the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study over the course of more than 30 years.
All participants reported their physical activity type and length every couple of years throughout the study period. For each participant, researchers calculated a physical activity variety score, based on how many of the following types of exercise they did consistently:
- Walking
- Jogging
- Running
- Bicycling
- Swimming
- Tennis, squash, or racquetball
- Climbing flights of stairs
- Rowing or calisthenics
- Weight training or resistance exercises
After analyzing the interplay between exercise variety and causes of death, researchers found that people with the highest exercise variety score experienced:
- 19 percent lower risk of death from any cause, compared with people with the lowest exercise variety, regardless of total time spent exercising
- 13 to 41 percent lower risk of death from heart disease, cancer, respiratory disease, and other causes
“We were particularly intrigued by the finding that a simple physical activity variety score remained associated with lower mortality after accounting for the total amount of physical activity,” says lead study author Han Han, PhD, a postdoctoral research fellow at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health Department of Nutrition in Boston.
“This pattern suggests that regularly engaging in a mix of activity types may confer additional longevity benefits that are not fully captured by total activity volume alone,” Dr. Han says.
How Does Exercise Support Living Longer?
“What this study adds is a critical new dimension to the exercise-longevity conversation,” says Dr. Kovacs. “We’ve known for decades that total physical activity is associated with lower mortality, but this research shows that variety itself matters. In other words, longevity is influenced not just by how much you move, but by how many different ways you move.”
For future studies, the researchers suggest looking at combinations of different activities and specific health outcomes to identify a potentially optimal mix for longevity.
It’s also worth noting that physical activity in the study was self-reported, which can introduce some measurement error. While the large sample size analyzed over the course of three decades strengthens confidence in the findings, Kovacs points out that the cohorts were largely composed of white health professionals, which could limit generalizability to the general population.
7 Reasons to Exercise Outdoors and How to Get Started
Next up video playing in 10 seconds
How to Get More Variety in Your Home Workouts
“The amount of physical activity is important in its own right and should remain a priority. What we wish to emphasize here is that, when the total amount of activity is held constant, engaging in a greater variety of physical activities, rather than simply relying on a single type alone, may be more beneficial for longevity,” Han says.
For most healthy adults, Kovacs typically suggests a workout routine combining aerobic movement, strength training, dynamic or skill-based activity (like tennis), and low-intensity lifestyle movement (such as gardening or taking the stairs).
For people who are already active, this could look like replacing one cardio session with strength training, or adding a recreational sport once a week, Kovacs says.
“Longevity isn’t about doing one thing perfectly; it’s about challenging the body in multiple complementary ways, consistently, over decades.”
- Han H et al. Physical activity types, variety, and mortality: results from two prospective cohort studies. BMJ. January 20, 2026.
- Benefits of Exercise. MedlinePlus. September 15, 2025.
- Three Types of Exercise Can Improve Your Health and Physical Ability. National Institute on Aging. January 14, 2025.
- How Much Exercise Do I Need? MedlinePlus. September 14, 2025.

Tom Gavin
Fact-Checker
Tom Gavin joined Everyday Health as copy chief in 2022 after a lengthy stint as a freelance copy editor. He has a bachelor's degree in psychology from College of the Holy Cross.
Prior to working for Everyday Health, he wrote, edited, copy edited, and fact-checked for books, magazines, and digital content covering a range of topics, including women's health, lifestyle, recipes, restaurant reviews, travel, and more. His clients have included Frommer's, Time-Life, and Google, among others.
He lives in Brooklyn, New York, where he likes to spend his time making music, fixing too-old electronics, and having fun with his family and the dog who has taken up residence in their home.

Cristina Mutchler
Author
Cristina Mutchler is an award-winning journalist with more than a decade of experience covering health and wellness content for national outlets. She previous worked at CNN, Newsy, and the American Academy of Dermatology. A multilingual Latina and published bilingual author, Cristina has a master's degree in Journalism from the E.W. Scripps School of Journalism at Ohio University.