Dr. Gargi Kakani
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Dr. Gargi Kakani, MD, MPH | Pediatric Physician & Public Health Professional | Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health | MedStar Georgetown University Hospital
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Track Your Health Easily with a 6 Minute Walk Test Calculator

Use this free 6MWT calculator to find your predicted 6 minute walk distance and see how your result compares to the normal 6 minute walk distance for your age, sex, height, and weight. Instant results — no sign-up needed.

Live calculation — no button needed
Multiple distance units supported
Based on Enright & Sherrill 1998
Color-coded performance interpretation
100% Private — all calculations happen in your browser. No data is stored or sent anywhere.

6 Minute Walk Test Calculator

Personal Information
Sex
Age
Height
Weight

Check Your 6MWD
Distance walked
Percent of expected distance
--
Your walk
vs predicted
Performance vs Predicted Population
0%Poor <60%Below avg 60–80%Normal 80–100%Excellent >100%
Distance Comparison
Your walk
Predicted

Important Medical Disclaimer

→ This 6 minute walk test calculator is a mathematical estimation tool only and does not diagnose any medical condition.

→ The 6MWT is a clinical test that should ideally be performed under the supervision of a trained healthcare professional, particularly for patients with cardiopulmonary conditions.

→ Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before interpreting 6MWT results in a clinical context.

→ Sources: Enright PL, Sherrill DL — Reference equations for the six-minute walk in healthy adults (American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 1998) · ATS Statement: Guidelines for the Six-Minute Walk Test (American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 2002) · omnicalculator.com · mdcalc.com

What is the 6 Minute Walk Test?

The 6 minute walk test (6MWT) is a simple, submaximal exercise test that measures the distance a person can walk on a flat, hard surface in six minutes. It is one of the most widely used clinical assessments of functional exercise capacity — the ability of the cardiovascular, respiratory, and musculoskeletal systems to work together during sustained physical activity.

Unlike treadmill or bicycle tests, the 6MWT requires no special equipment and reflects the kind of physical activity encountered in daily life. Patients walk at their own pace and may stop to rest if needed, making it safe and accessible for a wide range of individuals including older adults, people with COPD, heart failure, pulmonary hypertension, and those recovering from surgery or illness.

This 6MWT calculator uses the validated reference equations from Enright and Sherrill (1998) to calculate your predicted 6 minute walk distance based on your age, sex, height, and weight. Your actual distance is then compared against this prediction to produce a percentage of expected performance.

How is the 6 Minute Walk Distance Calculated?

This 6MWT calculator uses the Enright and Sherrill (1998) reference equations, published in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine. These are the most widely cited and clinically validated formulas for predicting normal 6 minute walk distance in healthy adults.

Predicted Distance Formula

Male: (7.57 × height cm) − (5.02 × age) − (1.76 × weight kg) − 309 Example: 65-year-old male, 175 cm, 80 kg → predicted = (7.57×175) − (5.02×65) − (1.76×80) − 309 = 560 m
Female: (2.11 × height cm) − (2.29 × weight kg) − (5.78 × age) + 667 Example: 60-year-old female, 162 cm, 65 kg → predicted = (2.11×162) − (2.29×65) − (5.78×60) + 667 = 488 m

Percentage of Predicted

Once the predicted distance is calculated, the tool divides your actual walked distance by the predicted value and multiplies by 100. A result of 100% means you walked exactly the predicted distance for a healthy person of your profile. Above 100% indicates above-average performance; below 80% suggests reduced functional capacity.

Normal 6 Minute Walk Distance by Age

The 6MWT norms below show typical reference ranges for healthy adults. These values represent the average expected 6 minute walk distance based on the Enright and Sherrill reference equations. Individual results vary with fitness level, body size, and health status.

Males — Normal 6MWT Distance

Age GroupAverage Predicted DistanceLower Limit of Normal
40–49 years~576 m~423 m
50–59 years~554 m~401 m
60–69 years~532 m~379 m
70–79 years~510 m~357 m
80+ years~488 m~335 m

Females — Normal 6MWT Distance

Age GroupAverage Predicted DistanceLower Limit of Normal
40–49 years~494 m~355 m
50–59 years~459 m~320 m
60–69 years~424 m~285 m
70–79 years~389 m~250 m
80+ years~354 m~215 m

Values are approximate population averages based on standard height and weight. Use the 6MWT calculator above for a personalised predicted distance based on your exact measurements.

How to Interpret Your 6MWT Result

The 6MWD calculator expresses your performance as a percentage of your predicted distance. The following categories are used for interpretation, based on widely applied clinical thresholds.

% of PredictedCategoryClinical Meaning
Above 100%Excellent 🟢Above-average functional capacity for your profile
80–100%Normal 🟡Within the expected range for healthy adults
60–79%Below Average 🟠Reduced exercise capacity; further assessment may be warranted
Below 60%Poor 🔴Significantly reduced functional capacity; clinical review recommended

A result below 80% of predicted does not necessarily indicate disease — it may reflect deconditioning, low baseline fitness, or suboptimal test conditions. However, a result below 60% is clinically significant and should be discussed with a healthcare provider, particularly in patients with known cardiopulmonary conditions.

Who Uses the 6 Minute Walk Test?

The 6MWT is used across a wide range of clinical and wellness settings. This 6MWT calculator is useful for anyone who wants to assess or track their functional walking capacity.

Clinical populations

  • COPD patients — the 6MWT is a standard outcome measure in pulmonary rehabilitation and is predictive of COPD mortality and hospitalisation.
  • Heart failure patients — 6 minute walk distance correlates closely with peak VO₂ and is used to monitor disease progression and response to therapy.
  • Pulmonary hypertension — the 6MWT is a primary endpoint in many clinical trials and a key prognostic marker in this condition.
  • Post-surgical rehabilitation — used to assess recovery after cardiac surgery, lung transplant, and joint replacement.
  • Older adults — a practical, safe way to assess functional mobility and fall risk in elderly populations.

General wellness use

Beyond clinical settings, the normal 6 minute walk distance is increasingly used as a personal fitness benchmark. Healthy adults can use this 6MWT calculator to track changes in aerobic fitness over time, monitor the effects of a new exercise programme, or simply understand their baseline functional capacity relative to age-matched peers.

How to Improve Your 6 Minute Walk Distance

  • Regular aerobic exercise — brisk walking, cycling, or swimming 3–5 times per week consistently improves cardiovascular endurance and 6MWD over time.
  • Interval training — alternating periods of faster and slower walking improves aerobic capacity more efficiently than steady-state walking alone.
  • Strength training — lower limb muscle strength is an important determinant of walking performance, especially in older adults.
  • Weight management — reducing body weight decreases the metabolic cost of walking and directly improves 6 minute walk distance, as body weight is a negative factor in the prediction formula.
  • Pulmonary or cardiac rehabilitation — for patients with COPD, heart failure, or other conditions, structured supervised rehabilitation programmes reliably and significantly improve 6MWT results.
  • Optimise medications — for patients with cardiopulmonary disease, ensuring optimal medical management can meaningfully improve exercise capacity.

Sources & References

→ Enright PL, Sherrill DL (1998) — Reference equations for the six-minute walk in healthy adults. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 158(5):1384–1387.

→ ATS Committee on Proficiency Standards for Clinical Pulmonary Function Laboratories (2002) — ATS Statement: Guidelines for the Six-Minute Walk Test. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 166(1):111–117.

→ Guyatt GH et al. (1985) — The 6-minute walk: a new measure of exercise capacity in patients with chronic heart failure. Canadian Medical Association Journal.

Frequently Asked Questions — 6 Minute Walk Test Calculator

What is a good 6 minute walk test distance? +
A good 6 minute walk distance depends on your age, sex, height, and weight. This 6MWT calculator gives you a personalised predicted distance based on your specific profile. As a general reference, healthy adults typically walk between 400 and 700 metres in 6 minutes. A result above 80% of your predicted value is considered within the normal range. Above 100% of predicted is considered excellent.
What is the normal 6 minute walk distance for my age? +
Normal 6 minute walk distance decreases with age. For a healthy male in his 60s of average height and weight, the predicted distance is typically around 530–560 metres. For a healthy female of the same age, it is typically 420–460 metres. However, these are population averages — the most accurate prediction is based on your individual height, weight, age, and sex, which this 6MWT calculator computes using the Enright and Sherrill reference equations.
Is 400 metres a good 6 minute walk test result? +
Whether 400 metres is a good result depends entirely on your age, sex, height, and weight. For a younger or taller adult, 400 metres may fall below the normal range. For an older, smaller individual, 400 metres could be within or close to the normal predicted value. Use the 6 minute walk test calculator above to enter your personal details and find out exactly how your result compares to the predicted distance for someone like you.
What does percent of predicted mean in the 6MWT calculator? +
Percent of predicted compares your actual 6 minute walk distance to the predicted distance calculated for a healthy person of your age, sex, height, and weight. A result of 100% means you walked exactly the expected distance. Above 100% means you performed better than average for your profile. Below 80% suggests reduced functional capacity. Below 60% is clinically significant and associated with impaired cardiopulmonary function.
How accurate is this 6MWT calculator? +
This calculator uses the Enright and Sherrill (1998) reference equations, which are the most widely validated and cited formulas for predicting normal 6 minute walk distance in healthy adults. The equations were derived from a large population study and are used in clinical research worldwide. However, the prediction represents a population average — individual results can vary due to fitness level, motivation, test conditions, and health status. The calculator provides a useful benchmark but does not replace a clinically supervised 6MWT.
What conditions is the 6 minute walk test used for? +
The 6MWT is widely used to assess functional capacity in COPD, heart failure, pulmonary hypertension, peripheral arterial disease, and following cardiac or pulmonary surgery. It is also used in pulmonary and cardiac rehabilitation to measure progress over time. In older adults, 6 minute walk distance is a useful marker of functional mobility and is associated with fall risk and long-term outcomes.
What are the 6MWT norms used in this calculator? +
This 6MWT calculator uses the 6MWT norms established by Enright and Sherrill (1998) based on a study of 290 healthy adults aged 40 to 80 years. The formulas account for age, sex, height, and weight — the four main predictors of 6 minute walk distance in healthy adults. The lower limit of normal is defined as the predicted value minus 153 metres for males and 139 metres for females (approximately 2 standard deviations below the mean).
How should I perform the 6 minute walk test at home? +
To perform the 6 minute walk test at home, find a flat, straight walking surface of at least 20–30 metres — a hallway or outdoor path works well. Mark the start and end points. Walk back and forth for exactly 6 minutes at your own comfortable pace. You may slow down or rest briefly if needed but should keep moving. Count the total distance covered and enter it into the 6 minute walk test calculator above. For the most accurate result, avoid vigorous exercise in the 2 hours before the test.
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