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Record Numbers Playing Sport and Taking Part in Physical Activity.

  • Writer: Sport England
    Sport England
  • Apr 24
  • 2 min read

Significant growth in activity levels for older adults and disabled people but there is more work to do to support those living in the most deprived places.



HARD WORK - DEDICATION - COLLABORATION


The number of people playing sport and taking part in physical activity in England is at the highest level on record, according to our latest Active Lives Adult Survey Report, which we’ve published today. 


The new figures show that, between November 2023 and November 2024, 63.7% of the adult population met the Chief Medical Officers’ guidelines of doing 150 minutes, or more, of moderate-intensity physical activity a week. 


That’s equivalent to 30 million adults in England playing sports or taking part in physical activity every week – up more than 2.4m from when we first published the survey results in 2016. 


The number of inactive adults, those doing less than 30 minutes of activity a week, is down, with this number falling by 121,000 in the last 12 months.  


This reflects significant progress, especially considering the huge disruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, and is a testament to the hard work of many organisations across the sports and physical activity sector.


"We want adults from all walks of life to be able to access sports and get active. Today’s data shows that we need to do more. This government will place tackling inactivity at the heart of our preventative health agenda, and we will work to empower local communities to have the facilities, resources and support they need so that everyone can lead a healthy and active life."

Stephanie Peacock

Sports Minister


Our Active Lives Adult Survey Report also gives us a detailed understanding of the factors that influence how likely a person is to be active.  


A person’s age, sex, gender, ethnicity, socio-economic group, whether they have a disability or long-term health condition, and the place they live in are all significant factors impacting our relationship with sport and physical activity.


The report shows some positive changes – since the survey began, the number of older adults (aged 55+) who are meeting the Chief Medical Officers’ guidelines has increased from 51% to 58% (2.5m people), while the number of people who are disabled or living with a long-term health condition has increased from 44% to 48% (470,000 people).


However, it also underlines that many longstanding inequalities remain, with women, those from lower socio-economic groups and Black and Asian people still less likely to be active than others. When a person has two or more of these characteristics, such as a black disabled person or an Asian man from a lower socio-economic group, the results are compounded.



Sport England’s long-term strategy, Uniting the Movement, prioritises tackling these longstanding inequalities.


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