⬅️Guide

app to track miles walked

👤
Trider TeamApr 20, 2026

AI Summary

Your phone is the only device you need to track your walks. The best app for you depends on what you want, from a simple step counter to in-depth data analysis.

You don’t need a fancy watch to track your walks. Your phone can do it just fine. The question is which app to use. Some are simple GPS trackers, and others are basically social media for runners.

The right one for you just depends on what you're looking for.

For the data nerd: Strava

Strava is famous for cyclists and runners, but it’s great for tracking walks. If you want to see your pace, elevation, and route on a map, it gets the job done. The free version is plenty to get started with—it logs your GPS, speed, and distance, and you can see what your friends are doing. It also has a safety feature called Beacon that lets you share your live location with a few people.

But Strava definitely treats walking like a second-class citizen to running. Features like "Segments" don't make much sense for a walk. Still, for pure data and mapping, it’s hard to beat.

For counting steps: Pacer

If you don’t care about maps and just want a simple step counter, Pacer is a good bet. It uses the sensors already in your phone to count steps, distance, and calories all day. The app is simple and clean.

One cool thing it does is adjust your daily step goal based on how much you’ve walked in the past, so it keeps pushing you a little. And it doesn't have to be running constantly, which saves your phone’s battery. The free version works well, you just have to ignore some ads.

For a little of everything: MapMyWalk

MapMyWalk is a solid all-around choice. It tracks your route with GPS and gives you all the key stats—pace, distance, calories, elevation. It also plays nice with Fitbit, Garmin, and MyFitnessPal, which is helpful.

The best part might be finding walking routes other people have shared nearby. You can also get audio updates on your walk so you don't have to keep checking your phone. The only real downsides are that the GPS can drain your battery and sometimes the signal gets flaky.

It was a Tuesday, I remember, around 4:17 PM, and I was trying to explain to my dad over the phone how to save a route on MapMyWalk. He was getting frustrated because he couldn't find the save button while sitting in his 2011 Honda Civic, which, for some reason, always has terrible cell reception. It was a reminder that even the best tech has its limits.

Start Midpoint End

For all the data: Walkmeter

If you want to know everything about your walk, get Walkmeter. It tracks something like 250 different stats—split times, cadence, you name it. It's almost too much information for a normal walk.

But it works offline, which is great for hikes where you lose service. If you're training for an event or just love digging into spreadsheets of your own data, this is the one.

So, which one should you get?

If you want maps and stats, get Strava. If you just want to count your steps, get Pacer. If you want a good mix of features and route-finding, try MapMyWalk. And if you need to know every possible metric, it's Walkmeter.

The best one is whichever one you actually open and use. Try a couple of them out. They all track the same mile.

More guides

View all

Write your own guide.

Download Trider to access AI tools and publish your routines.

Get it on Play Store