Fitness
Rising Global Sporting Goods Demand Driven by Fitness Trends
The sporting goods industry has entered a period of structural growth shaped by evolving lifestyles, health priorities, and rapid product innovation. Across both developed and emerging markets, consumers are showing deeper interest in exercise, recreational sports, and performance-enhancing apparel, driving sustained demand for high-quality sporting goods. This shift is not temporary; it reflects a long-term transformation in global health trends, fitness behavior, and consumer expectations. According to Kings Research, the global sporting goods market is estimated to generate a revenue of $168.20 billion by 2032.
While the market has traditionally been supported by athletes, sports enthusiasts, and recreational users, the landscape is expanding as sedentary lifestyles prompt individuals to adopt more active routines. Evidence from global public-health bodies clearly demonstrates a strengthening need for physical activity, which in turn is creating strong momentum for the sporting goods sector. At the same time, product innovation, digitalization, and the rise of athleisure are reshaping purchasing behavior, making sporting goods an integral part of everyday life.
Growing Global Inactivity Is Creating a Structural Tailwind for Sporting Goods
The connection between physical activity and sporting goods demand is direct: when more people adopt active lifestyles, the need for footwear, apparel, equipment, and accessories rises. However, an even stronger driver is the growing number of people who are not active enough and therefore represent untapped potential demand.
According to the World Health Organization, about 31% of adults worldwide did not meet recommended physical activity levels in 2022. This translates to roughly 1.8 billion adults being insufficiently active, indicating a massive global base of individuals who may turn to exercise or sports to improve their health. The WHO also reports that physical inactivity has increased by around 5 percentage points between 2010 and 2022, highlighting that sedentary lifestyles are becoming more deeply entrenched.
If current patterns continue, the WHO estimates that global inactivity levels may reach 35% by 2030, underscoring a mounting public-health challenge. The scale of inactivity directly influences long-term market growth, as rising health awareness encourages consumers to invest in sporting goods ranging from running shoes and athletic apparel to home-exercise equipment and digital fitness devices.
These trends collectively create a structural tailwind: as governments intensify public-health campaigns and more individuals recognize the benefits of active living, demand for high-quality sporting goods is expected to expand steadily.
Health Awareness Is Rising, Strengthening Sporting Goods Consumption
One of the most powerful demand drivers is the growing body of scientific and public-health evidence linking physical activity to long-term well-being. The WHO affirms that regular exercise significantly reduces the risk of cardiovascular diseases, type 2 diabetes, certain cancers, and various mental-health conditions. As this information becomes more widely recognized, consumers are taking proactive steps to incorporate physical activity into their daily routines.
For many, this shift begins with acquiring the right sporting goods: breathable athletic wear, comfortable performance footwear, strength-training tools, yoga accessories, smart fitness devices, and specialized equipment for home workouts. Health awareness is no longer limited to gym-going populations. Older adults, busy professionals, students, and even individuals working from home are now investing in gear that enables convenient, accessible exercise.
This broadening consumer base is creating deeper and more diversified demand for sporting goods across all regions.
U.S. Trends Reflect Strong and Growing Engagement With Recreational Fitness
Although global inactivity levels remain high, many developed markets have strong engagement rates with fitness and sports, demonstrating a stable foundation for the sporting goods sector. The U.S. serves as a useful benchmark.
Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) show that:
- In 2020, 24.2% of U.S. adults aged 18 and older met federal guidelines for both aerobic and muscle-strengthening activities.
- In the same year, 46.9% met the aerobic activity guideline, even if they did not meet muscle-strengthening requirements.
- In 2022, among adults aged 25 and over, 22.5% met both aerobic and muscle-strengthening recommendations. The CDC notes a strong education-related gradient: only 12.2% of adults with a high-school education or less met the guidelines, compared with 33.6% of adults with a bachelor’s degree or higher. (Source: cdc.gov)
These figures indicate not only a sizeable active population but also a large share of individuals who participate in either partial or intermittent physical activity. This group represents significant potential demand for sporting goods as consumers increasingly adopt walking, running, cycling, home-fitness routines, and recreational sports to meet recommended activity levels.
The U.S. example reinforces a broader global trend: even in mature economies, there remains substantial room for growth in fitness participation, and sporting goods are central to enabling that engagement.
Consumer Behavior Is Evolving Toward Performance, Comfort, and Versatility
The modern sporting goods consumer is significantly more informed, selective, and performance-oriented. Individuals today expect products that combine comfort, durability, and technology. Casual users, recreational athletes, and professionals all seek materials and designs that improve efficiency, reduce discomfort, and support long-term use.
Product innovation has accelerated as companies introduce lightweight materials, moisture-wicking fabrics, breathable mesh structures, ergonomic soles, and flexible training tools. Sporting goods brands invest heavily in research and development to deliver footwear that reduces joint impact, apparel that regulates body temperature, and gear that enhances training experiences.
Consumers also prefer products that reflect their personal style. As a result, design aesthetics, color options, and texture quality influence purchasing decisions. Sporting goods brands now balance science and fashion to create products that perform well while appealing visually. This combination of performance and design has encouraged more frequent purchases and helped expand the market.
Digital Fitness and Technology Are Transforming Sporting Goods Demand
Digitalization is reshaping the sporting goods landscape by creating new ways for consumers to exercise, track performance, and engage with fitness programs. Wearable technology, smart home-exercise equipment, AI-driven workout apps, and online fitness communities are now integrated into both recreational and professional sports activities.
The growing popularity of connected devices has created an entirely new sub-segment within sporting goods. Consumers purchasing fitness trackers, smart jump ropes, connected rowing machines, or virtual-training bicycles are simultaneously fueling demand for complementary products such as athletic clothing, shoes, resistance bands, yoga mats, and free weights.
Digital fitness creates a positive reinforcement loop: individuals who track their progress tend to stay more committed to their fitness routines, which increases long-term consumption of sporting goods.
Home-Fitness and Remote Work Are Encouraging Sporting Goods Purchases
Remote and hybrid work models have allowed people to restructure their schedules and dedicate more time to exercise. Many have incorporated short workout routines into breaks, mornings, or evenings. This behavior has strengthened demand for compact home workout products such as dumbbells, mats, foam rollers, skipping ropes, kettlebells, resistance tubes, and stretch trainers.
Home fitness is valued for its convenience and privacy. Busy professionals, parents, and older adults frequently prefer exercising at home instead of commuting to gyms. Even as gyms have reopened, small and medium-sized equipment continues to see sustained demand. This reflects a permanent shift in behavior rather than a temporary spike.
The home fitness trend has also encouraged manufacturers to create foldable, lightweight, and space-efficient equipment suitable for apartments and small homes. This supports long-term adoption across urban populations.
Growing Interest in Outdoor Activities Boosts Sporting Goods Consumption
Outdoor recreation is increasing worldwide as consumers seek meaningful experiences, fresh air, and physical movement. Activities such as running, hiking, cycling, camping, and outdoor yoga have gained significant popularity. These activities require specialized footwear, clothing, protective gear, hydration tools, and accessories.
Young consumers in particular value outdoor activities that combine wellness with social interaction. Social fitness communities, running groups, trekking clubs, and cycling collectives have expanded rapidly. These groups often encourage members to invest in quality gear that supports endurance, comfort, and safety.
The rise in outdoor recreation has also contributed to greater interest in multi-purpose products. Consumers purchase items that can transition easily from outdoor sports to daily wear, which supports growth in cross-training footwear and athleisure apparel.
Sustainability Is Becoming a Core Purchase Driver
Sustainability has become a critical factor in customer decision-making. Consumers are more aware of environmental impact and prefer brands that use recycled materials, responsible manufacturing practices, and low-waste processes. Sporting goods companies are responding by incorporating recycled polyester, organic cotton, plant-based rubber, and environmentally friendly cushioning materials.
Sustainability also aligns with durability. High-quality products that last longer reduce waste and provide greater value. Many consumers now prefer items that combine environmental responsibility with long-term functionality. This principle has influenced everything from footwear construction to packaging choice.
As sustainability becomes more important, companies that align with environmental expectations gain stronger brand loyalty and long-term trust.
Long-Term Market Outlook for Sporting Goods
The future of the sporting goods industry remains positive because of several reinforcing factors. Rising global inactivity, combined with growing health awareness, has created both immediate and long-range demand for fitness products. Verified data from the World Health Organization and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirm that millions of individuals across the world are attempting to become more active.
Digital fitness adoption continues to reshape workout habits and drive complementary product purchases. The popularity of athleisure strengthens year-round sales by extending sporting goods into daily wear. The revival of outdoor recreation creates robust demand for performance-based gear. Meanwhile, sustainability and product innovation continue to elevate consumer expectations and shape brand strategies.
With these combined trends, the sporting goods sector is positioned for sustained expansion. It serves a diverse audience that includes gym goers, runners, students, remote workers, older adults, professionals, recreational athletes, and outdoor enthusiasts. As lifestyle trends continue to shift toward wellness and physical activity, sporting goods will remain essential to modern living.
Fitness
At 72, Oprah swears by this specific move for full-body strength – here’s why it’s so effective
Oprah Winfrey, 72, has been vocal about her weight loss journey in recent years, revealing that maintaining fitness, particularly through strength training, has been crucial while using GLP-1s. Such is her love for these newfound fitness habits that she even did a 72-minute workout to celebrate her 72nd birthday earlier this year.
Now, the talk show host has taken to Instagram to share with her followers a specific strength move that has quickly become a staple in her routine: kettlebell swings.
Why are kettlebell swings effective?
‘Kettlebell swings are one of the most efficient movements because they combine strength, power and cardiovascular conditioning in one exercise,’ says Alice Jordan, a women’s strength and hormone health coach. ‘They target the posterior chain – glutes, hamstrings and lower back – which is especially important for women as we age, helping to improve posture, reduce back pain and support metabolism.’
Jordan adds that kettlebell swings ‘also elevate the heart rate quickly, making them ideal for busy women who want maximum results in minimal time,’ and that when incorporated into your routine correctly, they ‘can improve fat loss, core stability and overall functional strength, which carries over into everyday movement and injury prevention.’
Another key benefit that makes kettlebell swings such an effective movement for women as they age? ‘They help build explosive strength and bone density – both crucial for women during and after menopause.’
How to do kettlebell swings
It’s important to take the time to properly learn the right technique – as Oprah said she did. Alongside the video she posted on Instagram of her performing the exercise, Oprah wrote ‘I first saw other people doing kettlebell swings so skillfully that I didn’t attempt them for at least a year! Now Trainer Peter is always right by my side to course correct me so I’m doing them right – and I think I finally got the swing of them.’
Explaining how to do kettlebell swings, Jordan says that ‘the movement should come from the hips, not the lower back or shoulders. Think about pushing your hips back, keeping your spine neutral, and then powerfully driving the hips forward. This helps target the glutes and reduces the risk of injury.’
When it comes to ensuring that you choose the right weight, Jordan adds that a ‘good starting point for most women is a kettlebell between 6-10kg – but the key is that it should feel challenging enough to drive the hips forward without using the arms.’
‘If you can easily lift it with your shoulders, it’s usually too light. Many beginners actually benefit from going slightly heavier so they learn proper hip hinge mechanics,’ she flags.
How often to do kettlebell swings
So, how often should you do the move per week? ‘For beginners, I’d typically recommend starting with 2-3 sets of 10-15 reps, focusing on good technique and plenty of rest between sets,’ says Jordan. ‘The priority early on is learning the hip hinge and building confidence with the movement, rather than pushing volume too quickly.’
Doing this 2-3 times per week works well for most beginners, she adds, as it ‘allows enough time to recover while still building strength, power and cardiovascular fitness.’ When your technique and fitness improve, you ‘can gradually increase either the number of sets or include swings as part of full-body workouts.’
‘It’s also helpful for beginners to keep sessions relatively short and stop before fatigue affects form, as this reduces the risk of injury and helps reinforce good movement patterns.’
Common mistakes to avoid
Jordan says common mistakes to avoid include:
- Turning the swing into a squat rather than a hinge
- Lifting the kettlebell with the arms instead of letting momentum and hip power do the work
- Rounding the back and going too heavy too quickly
It really is important to be patient and take some time to get your form exactly right – as it will mean you’ll get the most out of the exercise in the long run.
Hannah Bradfield is a Senior Health and Fitness Writer for Women’s Health UK. An NCTJ-accredited journalist, Hannah graduated from Loughborough University with a BA in English and Sport Science and an MA in Media and Cultural Analysis. She has been covering sports, health and fitness for the last five years and has created content for outlets including BBC Sport, BBC Sounds, Runner’s World and Stylist. She especially enjoys interviewing those working within the community to improve access to sport, exercise and wellness. Hannah is a 2024 John Schofield Trust Fellow and was also named a 2022 Rising Star in Journalism by The Printing Charity. A keen runner, Hannah was firmly a sprinter growing up (also dabbling in long jump) but has since transitioned to longer-distance running. While 10K is her favoured race distance, she loves running or volunteering at parkrun every Saturday, followed, of course, by pastries. She’s always looking for fun new runs and races to do and brunch spots to try.
Fitness
The Workout Habit That Can Become Harm
If your day begins with a HIIT class and ends with the saintly glow of “I’ve been good,” you’re not alone. Regular movement can lighten stress, settle anxiety, and generally make the world feel a little less like a group chat on deadline. But for a small group of gym-goers, exercise addiction isn’t a punchline or a humblebrag — it’s a real behavioural pattern that can quietly bulldoze daily life.
Researchers in Budapest have suggested that for around 0.3 to 0.5% of gym-goers, working out and the quest for ultimate wellness can tip into unhealthy obsession. And a separate study from Anglia Ruskin University found the risk rises sharply for people with a history of eating disorders — with researchers reporting you’re nearly four times more likely to experience exercise addiction if you’ve previously had anorexia or bulimia.
It’s an uncomfortable twist, because exercise is supposed to be the good bit. The socially approved coping mechanism. The one that gets likes, not concerned phone calls.
Why “Healthy” Can Be a Convenient Disguise
Wellness culture has a curious magic trick: it can make rigid rules look like discipline. Eight hours’ sleep becomes a badge of honour. “Clean eating” becomes a personality. And a workout missed can feel, for some, less like a rest day and more like a moral failure.
That’s what makes compulsive exercise hard to spot — especially during or after recovery from disordered eating. To friends and family, it can look like someone has “sorted themselves out.” Under the surface, the engine can be the same: fear, control, anxiety — just with different gym kit.
As Eating Disorders Awareness Week begins (March 2–8), we spoke to experts about wellness, disordered exercise, and the additional risks for those with a history of eating disorders.
Can Eating Disorders Be Replaced by Exercise Addiction?
Kerrie Jones, a psychotherapist specialising in eating disorders and clinical director of treatment centre Orri, says eating disorders and exercise addiction often share the same roots — and the same function.
“Eating disorders, like exercise addiction, arise when we have lived through an experience – or lots of different experiences – that have taught us that we’re not safe in our day-to-day lives,” she says.
“Obsessing about food, weight or exercise is a behavioural mechanism that has developed as a means of keeping us feeling safe and in control when otherwise we’d feel overwhelmed with fear and anxiety.”
Jones explains that these behaviours can narrow a person’s focus to what feels measurable and manageable — calories, reps, weight, shape — while masking the deeper fear underneath.
“We call these ‘maladaptive’ coping mechanisms, as they develop through seemingly good intentions, but to the detriment of our longer-term physical and mental health.
“Sometimes, when people reach a point in their recovery where they are stable and functioning, they may move from an obsessive relationship to food, to an obsessive relationship to exercise.”
And because exercise is widely applauded — and often actively encouraged — the behaviour can stick around far longer than people realise.
“It’s a much more socially accepted and idolised means of maintaining obsessive behavioural patterns,” says Jones, which means it can linger for years before someone seeks help.
What Drives Exercise Addiction Psychologically?
There’s rarely one neat cause. It’s more often an overlap of biology, social pressure, past experiences, and psychology — with a particular role for trauma and learned patterns of control.
“There’s no one reason or cause why someone might develop an eating disorder or exercise addiction, however, it’s often a combination of social, genetic and psychological factors,” says Jones. “Commonly, we find a negative life experience or traumatic experience at the root.”
Chartered psychologist and Healthspan ambassador Dr Meg Aroll says more research is needed specifically on exercise addiction, but we already know a lot about how behavioural addictions operate — particularly the loop of compulsive thoughts and repeated behaviours.
“We know that it’s important to change patterns of ruminative and compulsive thoughts in people with behavioural addictions, which is why treatments such as cognitive behavioural therapy are likely to be of help.”
In plain terms: it’s not about willpower. It’s about patterns — and treating what’s driving them.
Signs to Watch For: When Training Turns Compulsive
There’s no single template for exercise addiction. People don’t present in one uniform way, and “looking fit” tells you precisely nothing about what’s happening mentally.
But there are common warning signs, especially when exercise becomes less about wellbeing and more about relief, guilt, or control.
Jones says a person might:
- Feel guilt and shame about missing exercise routines
- Keep secrecy around how much they’re exercising
- Continue to workout when ill, exhausted or injured
- Prioritise exercise repeatedly over family, friends, work, and recovery
That last point matters. Training that regularly trumps relationships, rest, or basic health isn’t “dedication.” It’s a red flag waving in fluorescent gym lighting.
Does Social Media Make It Worse?
Social media can be supportive — community can be a lifeline — but it can also validate compulsive habits. A life organised entirely around workouts can look, online, like “motivation,” when the reality might be anxiety management dressed up as routine.
“For people who are predisposed to eating disorders or behavioural addictions, wellness culture can appear to support and condone this type of maladaptive behaviour,” says Aroll.
“However, on its own, wellness and social media culture is not to blame – someone with such conditions will have a complex combination of factors in their life leading to their symptoms, which should be investigated fully and treated professionally.”
Jones adds that if you know you have an addictive personality, it’s worth curating your feed with intent — and unfollowing content that escalates guilt, restriction, body obsession, or punishment narratives.
What To Do If You’re Worried About Someone
The hardest part is saying something — and the most important part is saying it well. Jones recommends addressing it directly, but with care around timing, tone, and what you focus on.
“It’s important to broach the topic with them directly as their physical and mental health may be severely at risk,” says Jones. “Pick a time to talk when emotions aren’t running high, and where possible, try and avoid talking about exercise specifically or the more symptomatic aspects of exercise addiction or their eating disorder.
“Instead, focus your questions and concerns on how they’re feeling, underneath their day-to-day activities.
“Keep in mind that there are specialists out there who can help and the charity Beat has numerous resources on how to have a difficult conversation with someone.”
In other words: aim beneath the behaviour, toward the emotion.
Do We Need a Broader Conversation About “Healthy”?
Here’s the tricky bit. Health professionals rightly champion exercise for physical and mental health. But for people recovering from eating disorders — or with a vulnerability to compulsive behaviours — messaging can land differently. “More is better” can become a permission slip for harm.
“I think there needs to be a broader conversation about what it means to be ‘healthy’ and to live a ‘healthy lifestyle’,” says Jones. “What works for some, may not work for others, particularly if they’ve suffered with an eating disorder in the past and would have trouble maintaining a normal relationship to exercise and food.”
Jones says clinicians assessing physical health need to consider personal history and the intention behind the behaviour.
“If possible, we need to investigate the intention associated with exercise and unpick the feelings that arise before, during and after exercising.”
That’s the real measuring stick. Not calories burned, not streaks kept alive, not the smug serenity of a kale smoothie. If movement helps you live more freely, it’s doing its job. If it’s tightening the cage — especially in recovery — it’s time to call it what it may be: exercise addiction, and something that deserves proper support, not applause.
Fitness
I’ve seen some bizarre exercises online. If I were an influencer, this is the one workout I’d recommend | Devi Sridhar
Are you still keeping up with your 2026 resolution to exercise more? Or perhaps you’re just trying to survive the winter doldrums, with exercise the last thing on your mind. Whatever it is, social media is alight with fitness influencers showing off all kinds of bizarre and viral exercise trends.
Take squats, a core exercise move. Those don’t seem good enough any more, so now we have Zercher squats (holding a barbell in your elbow crease like a metal baby), squats on vibration plates, squats while throwing a heavy ball and on and on. Some of these exercises may in fact be good, some useless, but because influencers can’t be seen to be doing the same thing every day, the key thing is that they’re novel and can be sold as “the little-known secret exercise that everyone should be doing”.
Then there’s adding a gimmick to an existing exercise. There’s goat yoga, puppy yoga and – my favourite new trend from the US – snake yoga, in which snakes such as pythons slither around the room and on to mats and yogis while they’re in downward dog thinking about spiritual intentions or, more likely, what’s for dinner. The marketing is that being around snakes in yoga can help overcome a fear of snakes while also building flexibility. Cross two things off your to-do list at once!
Here’s my public health take: fear of snakes is rational. About 5.4 million people are bitten by snakes each year. Evolution spent thousands of years instilling that fear in us – for good reason.
Why do bizarre fitness trends go viral, and why do they appeal to something within us? I think it has to do with boredom, the need for novelty and Fomo. Exercise can feel boring: going out running for the same 5k or heading to the gym to the same equipment and space. This is true also for yoga, which can feel slow and lack excitement.
The idea of trying something new is appealing, plus there is a constant push by certain fitness influencers implying that they know something we don’t. Some of them play on health anxiety and a desire to optimise with the “best” exercise to maximise your time and results: how to get a six-pack in two weeks or how to lose 10kg in five days (both pretty much impossible, by the way). Plus they’re telling us to buy a supplement or try a new juice cleanse that will be the missing piece to make us feel better by March.
Fitness trends sell that hope of feeling better. Take Hyrox, a hybrid endurance event where super-fit people pay good money to push sleds, throw wall balls, burpee-jump across the room and run between various stations. It’s impressive to watch and looks great on social media – which feels essential these days – and it’s a clear way to show your friends how fit you are. But it also reflects the push towards extreme, complicated and injury-prone exercise.
I’m going to say something you don’t want to hear, especially if you love Hyrox or snake yoga: none of this is necessary. If your goal is to feel strong, move better, stay pain free and live longer, you need three things: cardio exercises, resistance training and mobility training.
You don’t need weights, reptiles or cameras. It sounds simple, but what makes exercise hard isn’t the actual movement. It’s finding the time and routine to make it sustainable and part of your daily life. Which brings me to the most untrendy thing I can offer you: a 13-minute workout you can do anywhere, with or without weights. This is my default on busy days, and when I’m at home I have an 8kg sandbag on hand to add in.
All you need is a timer on your watch or phone. Start with three minutes of cardio to get warm and your heart rate up, whether it’s jogging on the spot, jumping jacks or just marching. Then it’s three minutes of legs, rotating between five each of narrow squats, broad squats, backward lunges, forward lunges and calf raises. Then on to three minutes of upper body, moving between five each of narrow push-ups, wide push-ups and tricep dips. Time to move on to core with a one-minute plank (either on your hands or forearms) and one minute of glute bridges (lifting your hips off the floor while lying on your back). For the final two minutes, just stretch out, whether that’s standing and reaching for your toes, lying on your back and moving your legs right and left like windshield wipers or sitting cross-legged and folding forward.
That’s it. Do this a couple of times a week if you can. Will you see it go viral on socials? No. Will it get sponsored by a supplement company? No. Will it increase your healthy life expectancy and make you feel happier? Public health evidence suggests yes. The real challenge, it turns out, isn’t finding the latest hack or trend. It’s sticking with a (snake-free) routine, even when the novelty wears off and 2026 resolutions fade from memory.
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