app to track walks
You don't need a spreadsheet. You don't need a fancy subscription or a personal trainer who texts you at 5 AM. You just need to know if you're doing more than you were yesterday. That's it. That's the whole game.
Most walking apps are overbuilt. They’re designed for marathon runners and cyclists, cluttered with features that feel like a consolation prize for walkers. You don’t need pace-shaming or competitive segments on your daily stroll. You just need a tool that does the basics without getting in your way.
The only things that matter
Forget the noise. A good walking app only needs to do a few things well.
First, GPS. It has to track your route, your distance, and your time. That’s table stakes. Apps like Strava and MapMyWalk are popular because their GPS is generally reliable.
Second, simple numbers. You want to see your steps, distance, and maybe calories burned. If an app syncs with your phone's built-in sensors or a wearable like a Fitbit or Apple Watch, that's a huge plus. You get credit for all your movement, not just the "official" walks.
And then, history. Seeing your progress over weeks and months is what keeps you going. A simple calendar or graph of your own activity beats any social feature. It’s you against you, yesterday.
I remember this one time, I was trying to hit a 30-day streak. On day 27, I realized at 11:48 PM that I hadn't gone for my walk. I threw on my shoes, grabbed my keys, and walked exactly 1.1 miles around my block in my pajamas, circling past my neighbor's 2011 Honda Civic four times just to hit my distance goal. It felt ridiculous, but breaking the chain felt worse.