Walk with Walgreens

Omron® The Partner You Can Count On

You’d be surprised by how many steps you already take each day; a few hundred walking to the bus, another couple hundred going down the block for lunch, and with an Omron Pedometer you’ll know just how many steps you’re taking and begin looking for ways to see that number get bigger every day.

A Few Steps Toward a Healthier Life

Walking is a great way to stay healthy. In fact, walking 10,000 steps a day is widely recommended by health and fitness professionals, and when you track your steps with a pedometer, like the Omron HJ-112, studies show you’re likely to increase your total number of steps a day by 2,000 or 1 miles*

Getting Started

Warm Up First:

before your walk, stretch (arm circles, hip circles, and leg lifts to get your blood flowing and reduce the risk of injury.


Use a Pedometer:

You can count on Omron pedometers to accurately track your daily routine and help you reach your recommended 10,000 daily steps.


Set Goals:

Begin slowly and work your way up. By setting goals you'll push yourself farther and achieve more. Try adding a half mile every other day to your daily steps, and then increase to a half mile daily.



Mix It Up:

Add variety to your routine by changing pace, walking up hill, or just changing your route.


Add Resistance:

Include some upper body exercises as you walk such as arm reaches or carrying water bottles in each hand to increase your calorie burn.

  • Single-axis acceleration sensor
  • Stores 7 days of information
  • Dual-axis acceleration sensor counts steps when placed horizontally or vertically
  • Counts aerobic steps
  • Calculates steps, burned calories and fat grams and distance
  • Tri-axis acceleration sensor counts steps when used flat, horizontally and vertically
  • Calculates steps, burned calories and distance
  • Stores 7 days of information in memory
  • Dual-axis acceleration sensor counts steps when placed horizontally or vertically
  • PC downloading
  • Calculate steps, burned calories and distance

*JAMA. 2007; 298 190:2296-2304