Physical activity and movement constitute one of the three major components of total daily energy expenditure. Unlike basal metabolic rate, which is relatively fixed, and thermic effect of food, which varies minimally, activity-related energy expenditure shows substantial individual variation based on lifestyle, occupation, and exercise habits.
Movement encompasses two categories: intentional exercise performed for fitness purposes, and non-exercise activity thermogenesis (NEAT)—the energy expended through occupational activities, daily living tasks, fidgeting, and maintaining posture. For sedentary individuals, NEAT may represent only 15% of daily energy expenditure. For active occupational workers, NEAT can exceed 30% of daily energy expenditure.
This distinction has important implications: people with physically demanding occupations burn substantially more calories daily than sedentary workers, even without intentional exercise. Conversely, people with sedentary occupations must engage in structured exercise to achieve moderate activity levels.