Most of the things people read about aging well sit somewhere between marketing and folklore. The actual research, drawn from a handful of large long-running cohort studies, agrees on a smaller and more boring set of habits than the wellness industry tends to advertise. The list below is built from that consensus.

The conceptual frame for what aging well means in the research literature comes from John Rowe and Robert Kahn’s 1997 paper “Successful Aging” in The Gerontologist, which defined the concept as the combination of low disease risk, maintained physical and cognitive function, and sustained engagement with life. The habits below map onto those three components, drawn from the MacArthur Studies of Successful Aging, the Harvard Study of Adult Development, the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing, and the broader gerontology literature.

None of them are guarantees. All of them are associations the research has found consistently enough to be worth taking seriously. Anyone considering a significant change to their diet, exercise, or other health behaviors should talk to their doctor first.

1. Move daily, and include some strength work

The single most consistent finding in aging research is that regular physical activity protects almost every system the body has. The detail most generic guidance skips is that strength training matters separately from cardiovascular exercise, particularly after 60. Muscle mass declines roughly 3 to 8 percent per decade after midlife, and the loss accelerates after 60. Maintaining muscle through resistance work two or three times a week, whether body weight, resistance bands, or light weights, is associated with reduced falls, better metabolic health, and better cognitive outcomes. The World Health Organization’s 2020 guidelines on physical activity for adults aged 65 and older recommend at least 150 minutes of moderate aerobic activity per week plus muscle-strengthening activities on two or more days. A daily walk is good. A daily walk plus twice-weekly strength work is better.

2. Stay in regular contact with people who know you

The Harvard Study of Adult Development, one of the longest-running studies of human life ever conducted, has produced one finding more durably than any other: the quality of a person’s close relationships predicts physical and emotional health in late life more reliably than wealth, fame, or genetics. The mechanism is not fully understood, but the effect size is large enough that the broader literature now treats social connection as comparable to other major health behaviors. The U.S. Surgeon General’s 2023 advisory on the epidemic of loneliness and isolation draws on the gerontology research to argue that social disconnection in older adults carries mortality risk comparable to several established medical risk factors. A few close relationships in which the person can be honest about how they are doing matters more than a large network of acquaintances.

3. Have something you are working on

Sense of purpose, in the gerontology literature, is one of the more interesting variables. People who report a clear sense of purpose in life, something they are working on, contributing to, or learning, show better cognitive outcomes, lower mortality, and better mental health across multiple cohort studies. Alimujiang and colleagues’ 2019 analysis in JAMA Network Open, based on nearly 7,000 adults over 50 in the Health and Retirement Study, found that those with the strongest sense of purpose had about half the all-cause mortality risk of those with the weakest. The purpose does not have to be grand. Volunteering at a local organisation, writing a memoir for grandchildren, teaching a skill, or maintaining a garden all count. What matters is having something specific that the person wakes up wanting to make progress on.

4. Keep learning something new

Cognitive engagement is the rough equivalent of strength training for the brain. The evidence does not support specific brain-training apps as protective against cognitive decline, but it does support active engagement with novel material, such as learning a language, picking up an instrument, taking a class, reading challenging books, or doing demanding puzzles. The mechanism is probably the maintenance of what researchers call cognitive reserve, the brain’s ability to compensate for age-related changes. Verghese and colleagues’ 2003 paper in the New England Journal of Medicine, tracking 469 older adults over 21 years in the Bronx Aging Study, found that frequent participation in cognitively demanding leisure activities was associated with substantially lower dementia risk. Routine cognitive activity is associated with later onset of dementia symptoms even among people who do develop dementia pathology.

5. Sleep on a regular schedule

The standard advice to “get eight hours of sleep” is less well supported than the wellness genre implies. Total sleep duration matters less than sleep regularity and sleep quality. Windred and colleagues’ 2023 paper in Scientific Reports, based on UK Biobank data from over 60,000 adults, found that sleep regularity was a stronger predictor of all-cause mortality than total sleep duration. Going to bed and waking up at roughly the same time each day, including weekends, is associated with better cardiovascular and metabolic outcomes than achieving any particular duration. Older adults often need somewhat less sleep than they did at 40, and worrying about hitting a specific number can produce sleep anxiety that is worse than the original problem.

6. Eat a Mediterranean-style diet, or something close to it

Of the many dietary patterns that have been studied for their effects on aging, the Mediterranean pattern has the strongest and most replicated evidence base. The shape of it is familiar by now: vegetables, fruit, whole grains, fish, olive oil, nuts, legumes, modest amounts of dairy, limited red meat, and limited ultra-processed food. The PREDIMED trial, published by Estruch and colleagues in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2018, a randomized trial of nearly 7,500 participants at high cardiovascular risk, found that a Mediterranean diet supplemented with olive oil or nuts reduced major cardiovascular events compared to a control diet. The pattern does not require strict adherence. Most of the benefit appears in people who shift their diet in this direction without going to extremes. What the evidence suggests is that the pattern matters more than any single ingredient, and that the people who do best tend to eat this way out of habit rather than out of vigilance. The Mediterranean countries the original epidemiology was based on were not following a diet plan. They were eating what was around. The closer the eating habit gets to that, the more the benefits seem to hold.

7. Do not smoke, and if you do, the gains from stopping are larger than people expect

Smoking is the most thoroughly established modifiable risk factor for nearly every age-related disease. The detail worth knowing in the context of aging well is that stopping smoking after 60 still produces substantial health gains. The body recovers a great deal of cardiovascular function within the first year of cessation, and stroke risk and cancer risk continue to decline for years afterward. It is never too late for the benefit to be significant, and a primary care doctor can help with cessation strategies that actually work.

8. Drink moderately, or not at all

The earlier research on moderate drinking as protective against heart disease has not held up well under more recent meta-analyses, which suggest the apparent benefits were largely attributable to confounding variables in the study designs. Zhao and colleagues’ 2023 meta-analysis in JAMA Network Open, examining 107 cohort studies with over 4.8 million participants, found no significant mortality reduction associated with low-volume alcohol consumption once methodological biases were addressed. The current consensus is closer to “less is better, and none is fine.” For people who drink, current guidance from most national health bodies is no more than one drink per day for women and one to two for men, with the lower end of that range being safer. The risks of alcohol increase with age as the body processes it less efficiently.

9. Get the recommended health checks, and engage with them

Regular engagement with healthcare matters more after 60 than at any earlier point in life. Annual check-ups, recommended cancer screenings, blood pressure and cholesterol monitoring, hearing and vision tests, and bone density scans for those at risk all catch problems while they are still manageable. The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force maintains current recommendations for which screenings are evidence-supported at which ages, and most primary care doctors will track these alongside the patient. The habit is not glamorous, and the appointments are easy to put off. The people who age well, in the cohort research, are disproportionately those who stay engaged with their healthcare rather than avoiding it.

10. Manage stress, in whatever way actually works

Chronic stress is associated with accelerated biological ageing through inflammatory and cardiovascular pathways, and stress management consistently appears in the cohort literature as a contributor to aging well. Epel and colleagues’ 2004 paper in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences was one of the first to link chronic psychological stress to shortened telomere length, a cellular marker of biological aging, and a substantial literature has built on the finding since. The specific stress-management method matters less than the consistency. Some people do meditation. Some people do gardening. Some people do long walks. Some people do regular contact with close friends, which doubles up with item 2. What does not work, on the available evidence, is ignoring chronic stress or treating it as a personal weakness to push through.

What the list does not promise

The ten habits above are population-level associations. They describe what the research finds, on average, across large groups of older adults. They do not describe any particular life.

The cleanness of the findings is part of what makes them appealing, and part of what makes them misleading. Cohort data smooths out the texture of how aging actually goes for any one person. The people in those studies who did most things right still got sick, still lost people they loved, still found their bodies doing things they had not asked them to do. The people who did most things wrong sometimes lived into their nineties without much complaint. Genetics, accumulated life history, healthcare access, and chance all matter alongside daily behaviour, in proportions nobody can quite specify.

What the list offers, in the end, is a more accurate picture than the wellness genre tends to provide, of what the people who aged well in the long cohort studies were actually doing day to day. Whether following the list will produce the same outcome for any given reader is a question the research cannot answer, and probably never will. The habits are worth taking seriously. Whether they are worth taking as seriously as we want to take them is harder to say.