December 5, 2025
NEAT—non-exercise activity thermogenesis—is the energy you burn outside of workouts. Here are proven, low-friction tactics to raise NEAT at home, even if you sit for work and don’t own a treadmill desk.
Stack movement onto habits you already do: calls, TV, meals, chores.
Small bursts add up; 100–300 extra kcal/day is realistic for most people.
Design your space for motion: cues, routes, and tools within reach.
Choose low-cognitive-load activities so you stay consistent on busy days.
We ranked home NEAT strategies by estimated daily calorie impact, adherence (ease and friction), space/equipment needs, joint-friendliness, and focus disruption. Calorie ranges reflect typical MET values applied to short bouts spread across a day for a 70–90 kg adult. Your actual burn varies by body size, pace, and minutes performed.
NEAT can create a meaningful energy gap without formal workouts. Consistently adding light-to-moderate movement in 1–15 minute chunks raises daily expenditure, mitigates stiffness from sitting, and improves mood and focus. Because these tactics piggyback on normal routines, they’re sustainable and don’t require special gear.
High minutes available, minimal cognitive load, zero equipment; fits remote work naturally.
Great for
Piggybacks on leisure time; predictable and easy to standardize.
Great for
Habit stacking beats willpower: pairing movement with calls, TV, and chores removes decision fatigue.
Environment design matters: headsets, step stools, supportive mats, and visible water bottles nudge action.
Fractionation wins: multiple 1–10 minute bouts can outpace a single long session for total daily movement.
Vary movement to protect joints: alternate lower-body, upper-body, and mobility tasks to avoid overuse.
Frequently Asked Questions
NEAT is non-exercise activity thermogenesis—the energy you burn through daily movement that isn’t deliberate exercise or sports. It includes walking around your home, chores, standing, fidgeting, and posture changes.
A realistic target for most adults is 100–300 extra kcal/day through simple changes. Highly active days can exceed that, especially with lots of chores or stair use. Your body size, pace, and minutes of movement drive the actual number.
Standing increases burn slightly over sitting, but gentle movement—pacing, shifting, step-ups—adds more. Alternate sitting, standing, and moving to reduce discomfort and maximize total daily expenditure.
Use step counts, movement reminders, and time-on-feet as simple proxies. Many wearables estimate active minutes and energy, but they can be off; trend direction matters more than precise numbers.
Start small, vary movements, and keep intensity low to moderate. Use supportive footwear on hard floors, stabilize step stools, switch carrying hands, and keep loads light. If you have pain or conditions, choose the most joint-friendly options and progress gradually.
You don’t need a treadmill desk to move more. Attach simple motions to what you already do, design your space to cue activity, and spread short bouts across the day. Pick two tactics to start this week, track your minutes on your feet, and build from there.
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Efficient vertical movement; brief bouts yield strong return.
Great for
Reduces stiffness and adds frequent motion with minimal focus cost.
Great for
Moderate MET tasks with practical payoff; easy to schedule in 10–15 minute sprints.
Great for
Low friction substitute for sitting; steady, repeatable minutes each day.
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Anchors movement to frequent, unavoidable behaviors.
Great for
Transforms one heavy trip into several easy, safe bouts.
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High adherence because it’s enjoyable; intensity varies.
Great for
Short, energizing bouts that counter afternoon slumps.
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