We all know fresh air is good for us. It’s one of those things people say so often it barely registers anymore. But the evidence behind it is genuinely compelling, and it goes well beyond simply getting a bit of vitamin D on a sunny afternoon.
Spending meaningful time in your outdoor space, a garden, a patio, a decked area you’ve actually made comfortable, can have a measurable effect on your mental health, your sleep, your stress levels, and even how much you move each day. The key word there is “meaningful.” Stepping out to put the bins out doesn’t count.
What The Research Actually Says
A 2019 study published in Scientific Reports found that people who spent at least two hours in nature each week reported significantly better health and wellbeing than those who didn’t. Two hours. That’s less time than most of us spend scrolling our phones on a Tuesday.
The Mental Health Foundation has long highlighted the link between time outdoors and reduced symptoms of anxiety and depression. Being in green space lowers cortisol, the hormone your body produces under stress. It slows your heart rate. It gives your nervous system a chance to stop reacting and start recovering.
None of that requires a spa break or a long walk in the countryside. Your own back garden, if you use it properly, can do a version of the same job.
Why Most People Don’t Use Their Gardens
Here’s the honest answer: because they’re not set up for it.
A garden that’s cold, exposed, or uncomfortable to sit in is not a garden you’ll spend time in. You’ll glance at it through the kitchen window and decide to stay inside. That’s not laziness, it’s just human nature. We gravitate toward spaces that feel good.
The good news is that this is entirely fixable. MacColl & Stokes Landscaping design and build outdoor living spaces specifically to make gardens usable for more of the year. Garden rooms, covered pergolas, outdoor kitchens, fire pits, proper seating areas with shelter. The kind of spaces you actually want to be in, not just look at.
When your outdoor space becomes somewhere you can sit comfortably with a coffee in March, or host friends on a damp October evening without everyone retreating inside after twenty minutes, you use it more. And using it more is where the health benefits actually come from.
The Physical Side
Gardening itself is a legitimate form of exercise. Digging, planting, weeding, mowing, it’s a low-intensity physical activity that works multiple muscle groups and keeps you on your feet for extended periods. A 2013 study from the University of Exeter found that people with gardens were more physically active overall than those without access to one.
But even if you’re not actively gardening, sitting outside encourages you to move more. You get up to deadhead a plant. You walk around to check on something. The environment just prompts more incidental movement than sitting on a sofa does. Over the course of a week, those small differences add up.
Sunlight, even the diffuse kind you get on a cloudy British afternoon, helps regulate your circadian rhythm. That’s your body’s internal clock, and when it works properly, you fall asleep more easily, sleep more deeply, and wake up feeling more rested. Poor sleep is linked to almost every major health concern going, from cardiovascular disease to mental health difficulties. Getting outside during daylight hours is one of the simplest ways to support it.
Mental Health And The Outdoors
Stress doesn’t just feel unpleasant. Chronic stress damages the body in measurable ways. It suppresses immune function, raises blood pressure, disrupts digestion, and contributes to long-term conditions that are very difficult to reverse once established.
Nature exposure interrupts that cycle. There’s something called Attention Restoration Theory, developed by environmental psychologists Rachel and Stephen Kaplan, which proposes that natural environments allow your directed attention to rest. When you’re focused on a screen, a spreadsheet, a demanding conversation, you’re burning through a finite resource. The garden lets that resource recover.
You don’t need to meditate or do anything structured. Just sitting outside, looking at plants, listening to birds, watching light move across the ground, is enough to start the process. It’s one of the cheapest and most accessible mental health tools available, and most people in the UK already have access to it.
The barrier, again, is whether the space is set up to actually invite you out there.
Making It Work In The UK Climate
The biggest objection to outdoor living in Britain is obvious. The weather.
It’s a fair point. We get roughly 1,493 hours of sunshine per year, compared to around 2,800 in Spain. But outdoor spaces don’t have to depend on sunshine to be usable. A well-designed pergola with a roof or retractable canopy gives you shelter from rain. A fire pit or outdoor heater extends the comfortable temperature range by several months. A garden room with glazed doors brings the outside in, giving you natural light and a connection to the garden even when it’s genuinely too wet to be out in it.
The Royal Horticultural Society estimates that around 87% of UK households have access to a garden or outdoor space. That’s an extraordinary number. But access and use are very different things, and for many people, a little investment in making that space more comfortable is what bridges the gap.
The Social Dimension
There’s another piece of this that often gets overlooked: other people.
Gardens and outdoor spaces are natural gathering points. When you have somewhere comfortable to sit outside, you invite people over more. You eat together outside, you chat longer, you stay off your phones because there’s something else to look at and talk about. Social connection is one of the most consistently protective factors for both mental and physical health. Loneliness is, by some measures, as damaging to long-term health outcomes as smoking fifteen cigarettes a day.
A well-used outdoor space doesn’t just benefit you in isolation. It changes how you use your home and who you spend time with.
Starting Small
You don’t need to redesign your entire garden to start getting the benefits. A comfortable chair in a sheltered spot is enough to begin with. If you can make that spot warm and pleasant for a bit longer, you’ll stay out longer. If you stay out longer, you’ll sleep better, feel less stressed, and move more without even trying to.
The research consistently shows that the biggest gains come from simply being outside regularly, not from doing anything in particular while you’re there. The garden, used well, does the work.
That said, if you’re thinking about making more serious changes, it’s worth doing it properly. An outdoor space you’ve invested in becomes one you actually use. And an outdoor space you use regularly, whatever the season, is one of the more meaningful things you can do for your long-term health.
The surprising thing isn’t that being outside is good for you. It’s how much difference it makes, and how little most of us do about it.
