Posted: 12th February 2026 | Back to news feed

 

For many in the equestrian industry, turnout is treated as a welfare “nice to have” rather than a fundamental need. Yet a growing body of scientific work challenges this view, consistently demonstrating that access to movement, grazing, and social interaction is essential to horses’ mental and physical health. This review by Jelka synthesises key studies on turnout duration, turnout type, behavioural welfare, physiological stress, and injury risk to clarify what current evidence suggests about how much turnout horses truly require.

 

The horse’s behavioural needs

Modern equine management often restricts the three behaviours horses perform most in natural environments: foraging, moving, and interacting socially. Broad welfare reviews (e.g., Krueger et al., 2021; Minero et al., 2009) emphasise that these behaviours are not optional, but are intrinsic biological needs. Horses evolved to walk many kilometres daily while grazing in social groups. When these needs are not met, behaviour, health, and welfare deteriorate in predictable ways, ranging from frustration and irritability to gastrointestinal issues and stereotypies.

Turnout responds to all three needs simultaneously. It allows for spontaneous movement, ad-lib grazing behaviour (even on sparse grass), and visual or physical contact with others. Consequently, studies consistently report improved behavioural expressions and reduced signs of chronic stress when horses have regular, meaningful turnout opportunities.

How much turnout? Evidence from duration-focused studies

Research that directly manipulates turnout duration is surprisingly rare, but the existing work offers consistent trends. Chaya et al.’s (2006) behavioural comparison of horses receiving very limited turnout versus those with substantially more access found strikingly different activity patterns and indicators of frustration. Horses deprived of adequate turnout tended to display heightened activity or “rebound” behaviours when finally released; an expected response when animals are prevented from performing a natural behaviour for long periods.

Lesimple (2020) reported similar implications in performance horses, showing that daily free movement is associated with more positive behavioural indicators, whereas interrupting turnout routines leads to measurable deterioration in welfare scores. While “minimum required hours” cannot yet be determined scientifically, the pattern is consistent. More regular turnout produces healthier behavioural profiles, and abrupt reductions in turnout have negative effects.

Group turnout and the value of social environments

Turnout quality matters as much as quantity. Studies exploring group pasture turnout (e.g., Kettunen, 2024) note marked improvements in calm social behaviour, locomotion, and overall time budgets that more closely resemble those of free-ranging horses. Group turnout allows horses to meet their social needs, something individual stabling or isolated paddocks cannot replicate.

Recent welfare frameworks (e.g., Phelipon et al., 2024) also underline that social restrictions are a major welfare risk. They argue that basic welfare for horses relies not only on space and movement but on the ability to interact meaningfully with others. This strengthens the case that turnout should, as far as feasible, involve social contact.

Turnout, stress physiology, and behavioural stability

A number of experimental studies have examined physiological and behavioural changes when horses move between stabled and turnout conditions. Werhahn et al. (2011; 2012) found that giving stabled sport horses structured free-exercise or turnout periods leads to calmer behaviour in the stable and reduced indicators of stress. Similarly, Young (2011) reported that both behavioural observations and cortisol profiles are more stable in systems that incorporate regular movement opportunities.

Taken together, these studies suggest that exercise alone cannot substitute for turnout. Even when stabled horses receive ridden or in-hand exercise, the absence of self-directed movement and environmental choice still contributes to stress-related behaviour.

Turnout consistency and injury risk

Concerns about turnout-induced injuries remain a common reason for limiting turnout time. However, emerging research counters much of this fear. In a recent survey-based study, Mouncey et al. (2024) observed that inconsistency in turnout routines, rather than turnout itself, was associated with increased rates of soft-tissue injuries. Horses whose turnout access varied unpredictably were more likely to experience stress-related behaviours and overexuberance when released, which can elevate injury risk.

This points to an important conclusion. Predictable, routine turnout is safer than occasional or irregular access. Horses that move freely every day maintain steadier musculoskeletal conditioning, reducing the likelihood of sudden high-intensity bursts of activity that occur when turnout is rare.

Stabling routines, stereotypies, and long-term outcomes

Decades of research have documented the relationship between restricted movement and the development of stereotypies such as weaving and crib-biting (Sarrafchi, 2012). More recent work (e.g., Bradshaw-Wiley et al., 2023) confirms that stabling regimes that heavily restrict movement and social interaction correlate strongly with behavioural indicators of compromised welfare.

Though stereotypies are multifactorial, limited turnout remains one of their most robust environmental predictors. Long-term prevention depends not only on adequate forage and social contact, but also on meeting the horse’s fundamental need for self-directed movement throughout the day.

Overall conclusion: What does the literature tell us?

While the research does not yet provide a universal formula for the “exact number of hours” of turnout horses need, the scientific consensus is clear and consistent:

  • Daily turnout is significantly better than intermittent turnout.
  • Longer durations produce more stable behaviour and lower stress indicators.
  • Group or socially enriched turnout offers stronger welfare benefits than isolated turnout.
  • Predictable routines reduce injury risk more effectively than restricting turnout.
  • Turnout cannot be replaced by ridden exercise or short periods of controlled movement.

In essence, the literature increasingly recognises turnout not as an optional enrichment but as a core welfare requirement.

At Jelka, their work is rooted in the understanding that equine welfare is shaped first and foremost by the environments we as equestrians create. They design and support systems that allow horses greater access to movement, grazing and social interaction, enabling them to express natural behaviours within managed settings. This may take the form of large-scale solutions such as Active Stable systems, or more incremental adaptations to traditional housing, including adjoining pens and flexible turnout designs. In every case, their aim is the same: to move beyond minimum standards and towards environments that actively support the horse’s physical and psychological needs, informed by evidence and grounded in practical, day-to-day management.

 

To find out more about Jelka visit www.jelka.co.uk

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