Want to live longer? Well, you don’t necessarily need drastic lifestyle overhauls for it - small, consistent tweaks to your daily routine may be enough to extend your lifespan.
A growing body of research, including a large study analysing nearly 60,000 adults from the UK Biobank, suggests that even minor improvements in sleep, physical activity and diet can add more than a year to life expectancy.
The ‘tiny changes’ that make a big difference
According to researchers, the gains can come from surprisingly small adjustments.
These include just five extra minutes of sleep per night, around two minutes of additional daily exercise (like brisk walking), and half a serving more of vegetables each day.
Individually, these changes may seem insignificant - but when combined, they can collectively add over a year to your lifespan.
Why small habits matter
Experts say the real impact lies in the synergy between sleep, movement and diet.
Improving all three together appears to be more effective than making a big change in just one area.
This combination - sometimes referred to as the SPAN approach (Sleep, Physical activity, and Nutrition) - influences both lifespan and healthspan (the number of years lived in good health).
What happens when you optimise all three
While small tweaks can add a year, the benefits grow significantly with better habits.
A seven to eight hours of sleep per night, roughly 40 to 45 minutes of daily physical activity, and a high-quality, nutrient-rich diet can transform your life.
Together, these could contribute to up to nine to ten extra healthy years of life, according to modelling from the same dataset.
Backed by broader research
The findings align with decades of research showing that lifestyle plays a major role in longevity.
Regular physical activity alone can increase life expectancy by up to four to six years.
Quick Reads
View AllHealthy lifestyle habits - including diet, exercise and sleep - can add five years or more, even offsetting genetic risks.
In some populations, adopting multiple healthy behaviours has been linked to over seven years of added life expectancy.
The takeaway
The message is simple but powerful: you don’t need perfection to improve your health.
Small, realistic changes - sleeping a little more, moving a bit more, and eating slightly better - can add up over time.
In a world obsessed with extreme diets and intense fitness regimes, this research offers a reassuring truth: longevity may lie in the little things you do every day.


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