Most people burn 4–13 calories per minute of pull-ups, depending on body weight and pace.
Easy Set (≈3.8 MET)
Steady Pace (≈6 MET)
Vigorous Set (≈8 MET)
Assisted/Band
- Lighter load; longer sets
- Great for volume goals
- Teaches full range
Easy Start
Strict Bodyweight
- Full hang to chin-over-bar
- 3–8 reps per set
- Steady tempo
Baseline
Weighted Pull-Ups
- Add 5–20 kg plate
- 2–5 reps per set
- Longer rest
High Demand
Pull-ups use your full body against gravity, so energy burns fast across short bursts. The exact number depends on body weight, pace, time under tension, and how you structure sets. To keep estimates consistent, use METs (metabolic equivalents) to tag intensity, then apply a short calculation that converts that intensity and your weight into calories.
Calories Burned Doing A Pull-Up: What Changes The Number
Here’s a quick range using common MET levels for calisthenics. “Moderate” covers easy sets with longer rests; “Vigorous” mirrors steady sets with crisp reps and minimal pause.
| Body Weight (kg) | Moderate kcal/min | Vigorous kcal/min |
|---|---|---|
| 50 | 3.33 | 7 |
| 60 | 3.99 | 8.4 |
| 70 | 4.65 | 9.8 |
| 80 | 5.32 | 11.2 |
| 90 | 5.99 | 12.6 |
| 100 | 6.65 | 14 |
These figures apply the standard equation with MET 3.8 for moderate effort and MET 8.0 for vigorous effort. Session totals swing with tempo, range of motion, and rest length, so treat the table as a planning tool rather than a lab reading.
Once you map your per-minute burn, it gets easier to fit pull-ups into your day next to your daily calorie intake target.
How To Estimate Your Pull-Up Calories With METs
Use The Research Formula
Calories per minute = MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200. Multiply by minutes of work for a set or workout total. This method appears across clinical and fitness references and gives a clean way to compare days.
Pick An Intensity
Pull-ups fall under vigorous-effort calisthenics when you string reps together with little pause. Public health pages describe vigorous work as a pace where you can’t say more than a few words without catching a breath, and exercise charts often place steady calisthenics near 8 METs. You can read a plain definition on the CDC page on measuring intensity, and you can scan calories for “calisthenics, vigorous” across body weights on this Harvard calorie chart.
Run A Quick Example
Say you weigh 80 kg and do three 40-second sets at a steady clip. Using 8 METs: kcal per minute = 8 × 3.5 × 80 ÷ 200 = 11.2. Each 40-second set is 0.67 minutes, so that’s ~7.5 kcal per set and ~22–23 kcal across the three sets. Longer sets or added load move the total up; generous rests move it down.
Calories Per Set And Per Rep
Short sets rack up calories in bursts. Here’s a rough guide for steady reps with full hang to chin-over-bar. Time per set assumes about 2–2.5 seconds per rep.
| Body Weight (kg) | 5 Reps (~20 sec) | 10 Reps (~40 sec) |
|---|---|---|
| 60 | 2.77 | 5.63 |
| 70 | 3.23 | 6.57 |
| 80 | 3.7 | 7.5 |
| 90 | 4.16 | 8.44 |
Tempo changes the math. Slow lowering and brief holds raise time-under-tension, so minutes climb and calories follow. Fast kipping reps flip that picture, trimming time per rep and lowering the total for the same rep count.
What Drives The Number Up Or Down
Body Weight And Added Load
More mass means more work against gravity. Weighted pull-ups bump the number quickly; band-assisted work trims it. Switch methods based on your goal for the day.
Reps, Sets, And Rest
Dense clusters with short rest raise average intensity across a minute. Long breaks cool it off. A simple rule: more work done per minute equals a higher reading.
Grip, Range, And Style
Wide grips and strict chest-to-bar reps demand more energy. Half reps and loose kipping lower the energy cost per rep. Strict sets bring steadier numbers, which helps with planning and tracking.
Safety, Form, And Pacing
Warm up shoulders and elbows, brace the midline, and move smoothly from a full dead hang to chin-over-bar. If joints flare, scale the volume or swap to assisted variations. Good positions help you stack sessions week after week.
Simple Warm-Up
Do 1–2 easy minutes on a rower or bike, then scap pull-ups, slow hollow hangs, and two light sets of two reps. Save the heavy sets for later in the session and keep the first working set modest.
Put Pull-Ups Into A Weekly Plan
Beginner Track
Run 2–3 sessions each week. Do 4–6 sets of 3–6 assisted or low-rep strict pulls. Add one set weekly until you reach 25–30 total reps. Keep rests long enough to keep reps clean.
Intermediate Track
Run 3 sessions each week. Do 5–8 sets of 5–8 strict pulls. Add a small weight once 8×8 feels steady. Hold form; let load creep up slowly.
Advanced Track
Run 2–3 sessions each week. Mix heavy triples with higher-rep back-off sets. Keep one practice day for speed-clean reps, then one day for weighted work. Use bands only for skill polish, not as a crutch on strength days.
Ways To Burn A Bit More With Pull-Ups
Add A Finisher
After your main sets, hang a light plate and run a 60-second EMOM of 3–5 reps for 5–10 minutes. The extra minutes lift total calories without dragging quality down.
Use Supersets
Pair pull-ups with split squats, step-ups, or farmer carries. Alternating keeps you moving while upper-body muscles rest, which raises total work across the session.
Extend The Eccentric
Lower for three seconds. The longer time per rep raises the per-set total without changing the rep count. Sprinkle these in, not on every set.
Mind The Rest Clock
Keep rest under 90 seconds for density days. Push it to 2–3 minutes for strength days. That simple tweak swings calories without changing your exercise list.
Where These Numbers Come From
METs are a standard unit for intensity. One MET equals resting effort. As intensity rises, METs rise. Public health pages explain how to judge intensity in plain terms, and university medicine tables list calories for “calisthenics, moderate” and “calisthenics, vigorous” across body weights. You can check the plain definitions on the CDC page on measuring intensity, and scan calories for gym moves on the Harvard calorie chart.
Bring It All Together
Pull-ups won’t match a long run on total calories, but they punch above their time slot. Use the MET method to size each set, pick a pace that fits your goal, and scale load or volume to suit your plan. Want a simple path to pair with your bar work? Try our calorie deficit guide.