App to track walking distance
You don’t need a spreadsheet. You don't need a fancy watch that costs more than your first car. You just need to know how far you went.
Figuring out your walking distance is less about complex gear and more about finding a tool that gets out of your way. Some people get lost in the data, tweaking settings and analyzing split times down to the millisecond. Most of us just want to hit "start," go for a walk, and see a number at the end.
The best app is the one you actually use.
What Really Matters in a Walking App
Forget the feature lists for a second. Most of them are noise. When you boil it down, you’re looking for a few simple things:
- GPS Accuracy: Does it draw a line on a map that looks like the route you actually walked? If the map shows you zig-zagging through buildings, the distance will be wrong. Most modern phones are pretty good at this, so it's less of an issue than it used to be.
- Core Metrics: You need distance, time, and pace. That's it. Apps like MapMyWalk and Strava have been around forever because they nail these basics. They show you how far you went, how long it took, and your average speed without a fuss.
- Low Friction: How many taps does it take to start a walk? If you have to navigate three menus and a pop-up ad, you’ll stop using it. The ideal app opens and has a big, obvious "Start" button.
I was standing at a bus stop on a Tuesday, I think it was 4:17 PM, checking my stats from a lunch walk on my old 2011 Honda Civic's blue-lit dashboard. The app I was using (which shall remain nameless) took so long to load my route that I almost missed the bus. That's friction. I deleted it right there.