StepMax / Guides / Battery-friendly pedometer
BatteryA pedometer that doesn't drain your battery: how it's possible
The #1 reason people uninstall fitness apps isn't motivation — it's watching the battery percentage fall. The fix isn't a setting. It's choosing an app built on the right sensor.
Why some step trackers eat your battery
GPS is one of the most power-hungry radios in your phone. Apps that track your route in the background keep it partially awake for hours, which is why a workout-mapping app can cost 10–20% battery on a long walk. Some apps also wake the main CPU constantly to poll motion data — cheaper than GPS, but still wasteful.
How near-zero-power step counting works
Every modern iPhone contains a motion co-processor: a tiny always-on chip that watches the accelerometer and recognises steps in hardware, independently of the main CPU, whether or not any app is open. A well-built pedometer simply asks this chip “how many steps since this morning?” — a query so cheap it doesn't register on battery statistics.
What StepMax does (and deliberately doesn't do)
- Counts steps from the motion chip — no background GPS, ever, for daily tracking.
- Works offline — no constant network sync burning radio power.
- Uses GPS exactly once, optionally, to measure your real step length for accurate distance. A one-time 5-minute calibration, not a background service.
- Widgets read cached data so glancing at your steps doesn't wake the app.
Check it yourself
- Install StepMax and use it normally for two days.
- Open Settings → Battery on your iPhone and look at usage by app.
- You should see StepMax at or near the bottom of the list — typically under 1%.
Battery tips for any step counter
- Prefer sensor-based counting over “route tracking” modes for daily steps.
- Low Power Mode doesn't stop hardware step counting — your steps still register.
- If an app asks for “Always” location permission just to count steps, that's a red flag.
All-day tracking. Rounding-error battery cost.
StepMax counts every step from your phone's low-power motion chip and saves GPS for the one job it's good at. Free on the App Store and Google Play.
Download StepMax free ▶ Google PlayKeep reading
- Do you need an Apple Watch to count your steps? No — here's why.
- How accurate is phone step counting, really?
- A private step counter: no account, no cloud requirement, works offline
StepMax is a free step counter for iPhone and Android by Cinderhound Studio. Some social features require an optional Sign in with Apple.