How little time outdoors does it take to feel better?
In 2010, two researchers at the University of Essex tried to answer this question. They pooled the results of 10 separate UK studies covering 1,252 people, then asked what sounds like an almost too-practical question: what is the smallest amount of nature that does you any good?
It seems about five minutes.
The multi-study analysis by Jo Barton and Jules Pretty found that short bursts of activity in a green setting lifted both mood and self-esteem. The biggest gains came fast, then tapered off.
We are writers and editors, not clinicians or psychologists. What follows is journalism about a body of research, not health advice. Anyone weighing changes that touch their mental wellbeing should speak with a qualified professional.
What 1,252 people actually showed
The paper, published in Environmental Science & Technology, was not new fieldwork. It combined data from ten existing UK studies into one analysis, comparing how people felt before and after activity. “Green exercise” is the authors’ term for physical activity done in nature: a walk in a park, cycling along a canal, gardening, fishing.
Across the studies, the improvement in self-esteem and in mood came out as moderate and reliable, not trivial blips and not miracles. A summary of the individual studies notes that eight of the ten showed a real rise in self-esteem, and seven of ten a real lift in mood.
Pretty described the work in strong terms. He said their analysis was among the first to show “dose-response relationships for the positive effects of nature on human mental health.”
Why five minutes is enough
Rather than rising steadily the longer people stayed out, the biggest jump in self-esteem came from the shortest dose: five minutes. Longer sessions still helped, but added less per minute. Later Essex work described this as a u-shaped curve, where even brief contact with nature had a positive effect, and where gentle activity did more for self-esteem than hard exertion.
The idea that short doses of green exercise carry their weight has held up in later work, though the research designs differ. A 2025 systematic review of 15 randomised controlled trials, covering 980 people, found a moderate positive effect of urban green exercise on mental health, with programmes built on sessions of under 20 minutes producing the largest gains. That is a different question from Barton and Pretty’s — multi-week interventions rather than one-off exposure — but it is consistent with the broader point that a lot is not required.
Pretty put the practical stakes plainly, though the link he drew is more inference than settled fact. As he told reporters, “short-term mental health improvements are protective of long-term health benefits.” The appeal of a five-minute threshold is obvious — it puts the benefit within reach of almost anyone, on almost any day.
What water adds, and how much
Another finding, about water, needs more care. Among the settings the authors compared, places with water showed the greatest gains for both mood and self-esteem. Every green setting helped, with waterside ones a little ahead.
The authors were clear the gap was small. The difference between settings was not large. So while “blue” spaces edged ahead of purely green ones, the honest takeaway is closer to “any natural setting works” than “you need a lake.”
One more detail stood out: the largest self-esteem gains showed up in the youngest participants and in those already struggling with their mental health.
What the study does not show
This was an analysis of before-and-after measures, not a set of randomized trials, so it shows association more firmly than cause.
Other researchers flagged a sharper gap: the data cannot determine whether the boost from green exercise beats the same exercise in another setting. Some of the benefit may simply be the movement, not the greenery.
Barton, however, was open about where she thought the evidence pointed. She argued there “would be a large potential benefit to individuals, society and to the costs of the health service if all groups of people were to self-medicate more with green exercise.” That is a policy view from one of the authors, offered with her own hedging, not a clinical instruction.
If you are struggling with your mental health, a walk outdoors is no substitute for support. A doctor or a mental health service is the right place to start.
Stripped back to its most durable line, the study isn’t really about lakes or ideal settings — it’s about how little contact with nature is needed to register a lift. The barrier is likely far lower than most people assume.














