"Springsteen's Vitality: 10 Tips to Stay Fit and Healthy at 76"

"Springsteen's Vitality: 10 Tips to Stay Fit and Healthy at 76"

He sticks with steady, consistent fitness

For more than 30 years, Springsteen followed a simple routine, alternating between running one day and strength training the next. These days, intensity takes a back seat. "I don't run anymore," Springsteen told fellow musician Tim McGraw in an Apple Music interview four years ago. "I lift a little weight to stay toned. I may get on the treadmill and I'll walk."

Another friend in the music industry, country singer Zac Brown, offered more insight into this philosophy. In an interview with Men's Health, Brown recalled Springsteen's advice: "Man, you need to sweat for an hour a day. I don't care what you do, doesn't matter. You need to sweat for an hour a day."

A 2025 review published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine supports this approach, finding that as we age, focusing on breaking a sweat regularly—not necessarily with tons of intensity—is associated with a 30% to 40% risk reduction in all-cause mortality.

He focuses on his diet

In his interview with McGraw, Springsteen said, "I think anybody that's trying to get in shape, exercise is always important of course, but diet is 90% of the game." While in 2024 he shared with The Times of London that he "pretty much" follows a one-meal-a-day diet (OMAD) to keep "lean and mean," his philosophy is less about a strict schedule and more about balance.

"I don't eat too much, and I don't eat bad food, except for every once in a while when I want to have some fun for myself," he told McGraw. It's a no-frills approach focused on what works for him, which is not deprivation.

He prioritizes relationships

"Relationships, you've got to learn how to love and how to let yourself be loved; this is essential to the health of your soul," Springsteen said in a 2024 address to incoming Boston College students.

He often credits his wife, musician and member of the E Street Band, Patti Scialfa, as his grounding force. Early in their marriage—when he described himself as a "lazy musician"—she challenged him to get up earlier to be more present for their children. The couple have three children together: Evan, Jessica (who won a silver medal as part of the U.S. equestrian team at the 2020 Summer Olympics), and Samuel.

In his biography Born to Run, Springsteen recalls Patti warning that he was "gonna miss it," referring to family life. The next day, at her urging, he got up early to make his kids pancakes—a moment he says marked a turning point in his parenting and perspective. It's a powerful reminder that even as a rock icon, meaningful relationships are as vital to longevity as any fitness routine.

He is big on community-building

For Springsteen, performing has always been about connection. In The Guardian, he said he feels a responsibility to ensure his work honors the people he's doing it for: his fans. This bond runs so deep that it inspired the documentary, Springsteen & I, which features 2,000 fan stories.

His E Street bandmate Steven Van Zandt even told Rolling Stone in 2012 that Bruce would drive event organizers crazy with stage modification requests to be close to his fans, saying, "We don't want to keep the audience away from us. We want to be as close as possible and Bruce needs to have access to them because he spends half the time in the audience."

Science shows that Springsteen's passion for his broader community—including his family relationships—may actually slow the biological process of aging itself. October 2025 research published in Brain, Behavior, & Immunity - Health calls it a "cumulative social advantage," linking strong social ties to a younger biological age.

He embraces mental health care

Springsteen has been open about his lifelong battle with depression, describing episodes that "sneak up" on him, particularly during his 30s and 60s. In fact, the upcoming biopic explores the emotionally raw period when he recorded his folk-inspired album, Nebraska.

For more than 30 years, he's relied on psychotherapy and medication, working closely with a psychiatrist. "We ignore our demons at our peril," Springsteen told Esquire. "All I do know is as we age, the weight of our unsorted baggage becomes heavier…much heavier. With each passing year, the price of our refusal to do that sorting rises higher and higher."

He finds ways to make a difference

"Find out where and how you can give back, because you're going to always get more than you give," he told the crowd during his Boston College speech. For Springsteen, philanthropy and advocacy are extensions of the same purpose that fuels his art: using what you have to lift others up. Through his foundations—the Thrill Hill Foundation and The Foundation, Inc.—he's quietly funded human services, poverty relief, and home repairs across his home state of New Jersey.

Springsteen's give-back mentality could play a role in staying sharp at 76. According to 2025 research published in Social Science & Medicine, helping others is associated with a 15% to 25% slower cognitive decline as we age.

He's stuck with a drug-free lifestyle

As part of the Rolling Stone interview, Van Zandt called Springsteen "a living example of what happens when you never do drugs your whole life." He added that Bruce was never much of a drinker, either. While many rock icons of his era turned to partying, The Boss chose a different path.

As if sprinting across the stage into his 70s isn't enough evidence to support his clean lifestyle, 2025 research published in BMJ Evidence-Based Medicine found that just one to three drinks a week may raise the risk of dementia by 15%. As for illicit drug use, the American Addiction Centers says that even recreational use can shave years—or even decades—off of someone's life expectancy.

He takes time to rest

One way that The Boss stays "Tougher Than the Rest"—to quote a song of his—is by making rest intentional. In Born to Run, he described the euphoric high that follows a show—but instead of chasing the rush, he learned to decompress, reflect, and recover.

As he's aged, Springsteen highlights how rest has become even more crucial. "I don't want to go out there tired," he told The Independent. "We put the pedal to the metal for three hours straight. It's fun to overwhelm the audience." Balance, he's found, is what preserves his power for those legendary performances.

He maintains a sense of purpose

Springsteen's enduring vitality isn't just physical—it's deeply tied to purpose. In his Boston College address, he urged students to "Choose something that makes you happy, that makes you want to get up and go to work in the morning and allows you to rest easy at night."

During a 2012 interview with The New Yorker, he reflected that early in his career, he "searched out something that I needed to do." Music, he said, became his way to explore big questions of identity, belonging, and struggle—and that finding purpose meant writing from something genuine and meaningful.

Many studies have explored the link between purpose in life and longevity—and the results are as compelling as they are consistent. Research published in 2023 in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health found that a stronger purpose in life lowers the risk of mortality, even in those with physical health issues.

Likewise, a 2020 study in Preventive Medicine showed that people who live with a sense of purpose have a lower risk of developing unhealthy behaviors over time, such as inactivity and poor sleep.

He's learned the art of self-acceptance

Rather than hiding his vulnerability about the issues that crop up as the years roll on, Springsteen embraces it with honesty. About the 2024 tour postponement, he later told fans on E Street Radio: "I am deeply sorry but this belly thing, despite my ability to laugh at it, has been a monster and is still unfortunately rocking my internal world."

This humility reflects a lifelong acceptance of contradictions within himself. As he said in his 2012 SXSW keynote: "Don't take yourself too seriously, and take yourself as seriously as death itself. Don't worry. Worry your ass off. Have ironclad confidence, but doubt—it keeps you awake and alert. Believe you are the baddest ass in town, and, you suck! It keeps you honest. It keeps you honest. Be able to keep two completely contradictory ideas alive and well inside of your heart and head at all times. If it doesn't drive you crazy, it will make you strong."

Springsteen's radical self-acceptance has scientific merit. Over the years, he's been open about "difficult times" throughout childhood—such as living with an alcoholic father and mental illness in his family—and how they've shaped his own struggles. Still, according to 2024 research published in Psychosomatic Medicine, self-acceptance and purpose may offset long-term

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