The 2-Minute Step-in-Place Test assesses aerobic endurance by counting how many times the right knee reaches the required height in two minutes. It is space-efficient and commonly used with older adults or clients where walking or running tests are less practical.
A client has limited space, poor weather makes outdoor testing difficult, and a running test is not appropriate. The 2-Minute Step-in-Place Test provides a simple alternative that can be performed in a small area while still challenging functional endurance.
The current MAT article describes the test as a simple option when space is limited, with the score based on the number of steps completed.
Test name: 2-Minute Step-in-Place Test
Also known as: 2-minute step test, step-in-place test
Purpose: Assess functional aerobic endurance
What it assesses: Repeated stepping capacity and endurance
Equipment: Wall marker or tape, stopwatch, chair or support if needed
Key finding: Number of valid right-knee raises in two minutes
Best used with: 6-Minute Walk Test, fatigue score, heart rate, RPE and balance notes
Key limitation: Influenced by balance, hip mobility, knee height accuracy and lower-limb symptoms
The 2-Minute Step-in-Place Test is a functional fitness test commonly associated with the Senior Fitness Test. The client steps in place for two minutes while raising the knee to a target height. The score is typically the number of times the right knee reaches the required height.
The MAT article notes that normative data is available for older adults and cites Rikli and Jones as a key source.
It is used when space is limited or when a walking or running test is less practical. It provides a simple measure of functional endurance and can be useful for older adults, general fitness clients and rehabilitation settings.
The test measures repeated stepping endurance. It also reflects balance confidence, hip flexion control, lower-limb tolerance, rhythm and ability to maintain the target knee height.
It does not directly measure VO₂max, diagnose cardiovascular fitness status or isolate aerobic capacity from balance and musculoskeletal factors.
The test may be useful for older adults, deconditioned clients, home-based assessments, group fitness settings, rehabilitation clients and people with limited testing space.
It may not be suitable for clients with significant balance risk, acute lower-limb pain, dizziness, unstable vital signs or poor tolerance of repeated stepping.
Stopwatch
Wall or vertical surface
Tape or marker
Measuring tape
Chair, wall or support nearby if needed
Measurz or MAT
Optional heart rate monitor and RPE scale
Explain the test and confirm the client can step safely.
Measure the midpoint between the iliac crest and the top of the patella. Mark this height on the wall or use a visible reference. Protocol descriptions from Rikli and Jones-based resources use this midpoint as the target knee height.
Ask the client to stand next to the wall marker.
On “go”, the client begins stepping in place for two minutes.
The aim is to raise each knee to the target height, but the score usually counts only the number of times the right knee reaches the required height.
Continue for two minutes.
The client may slow or stop if needed, but the timer continues unless the test is stopped for safety.
Record the number of valid right-knee raises.
Record RPE, symptoms, heart rate and balance notes if relevant.
The primary score is the number of valid right-knee raises completed in two minutes.
A higher score generally suggests better functional endurance and stepping capacity. A lower score may reflect reduced endurance, fatigue, poor balance, hip or knee symptoms, reduced confidence or difficulty maintaining target knee height.
Interpret results using individual change over time. Age-based norms exist for older adults, but they should be applied only when the client and protocol match the reference population.
Normative values are available for older adult populations through the Senior Fitness Test literature. They should not be generalised to all ages, sports or clinical groups without caution.
The 2-Minute Step-in-Place Test is used within the Senior Fitness Test framework developed by Rikli and Jones. It is practical, space-efficient and widely used for older adult functional fitness. Google Books identifies the Senior Fitness Test Manual as a source that provides test tools and adaptations for older adults with varying conditions.
Reliability depends on consistent knee-height marking, counting method, footwear, balance support rules and instructions.
Sensitivity and specificity are not applicable for routine use. This is a functional endurance test, not a diagnostic test.
Common errors include marking the knee height incorrectly, counting both legs instead of the right knee only, allowing steps below target height, not recording balance support, changing footwear or failing to document symptoms.
The test may be limited by balance, hip flexion range, knee pain, coordination, motivation or fear of falling.
Use the 2-Minute Step-in-Place Test to monitor functional endurance, assess home-based progress, screen general fitness in older adults, support return-to-activity planning and track change when a walking course is unavailable.
Record total valid steps, target knee height method, whether the right knee only was counted, balance support used, footwear, heart rate, RPE, pain, fatigue, symptoms, confidence and any pauses.
Track change over time using the same marker height and counting rules.
6-Minute Walk Test
Cooper 12-Minute Run Test
Time Trial Test
Balance - Single Leg - Eyes Open
Fatigue
Pulse Rate
Respiratory Rate
Lower-limb strength testing
It measures functional aerobic endurance by counting repeated knee raises completed in two minutes.
The target height is commonly set halfway between the iliac crest and patella.
Most protocols count the number of times the right knee reaches the required height.
It is most commonly used with older adults, but it can be adapted for other clients when the goal is functional endurance tracking.
Incorrect knee-height marking, inconsistent counting, balance support changes and different instructions can reduce reliability.
The 2-Minute Step-in-Place Test is a practical functional endurance measure.
It is useful when space is limited.
Correct knee-height marking is essential.
Count valid right-knee raises consistently.
Record balance support, symptoms and context in Measurz.
Jones, C. J., & Rikli, R. E. (2002). Measuring functional fitness of older adults. The Journal on Active Aging, 1(2), 24–30.
Rikli, R. E., & Jones, C. J. (1999). Development and validation of a functional fitness test for community-residing older adults. Journal of Aging and Physical Activity, 7(2), 129–161.
Rikli, R. E., & Jones, C. J. (2013). Senior fitness test manual (2nd ed.). Human Kinetics.