Daily movement from chores, errands, and walking typically burns 1,500–2,400 calories per day for adults, driven by body size, pace, and time.
Light Pace
Moderate Pace
Brisk Pace
Desk-Heavy Day
- Planned breaks each hour
- Walk calls + light chores
- Short stair bursts
Low → Mid
Errand-Packed Day
- Grocery trips on foot
- Carry bags evenly
- Cook at home
Mid → High
On-Your-Feet Job
- Standing and lifting
- Hallway laps at breaks
- Stairs over elevator
Mostly High
You burn energy all day long, even when you’re not “working out.” Walking to the bus, carrying groceries, tidying the kitchen, climbing a few flights, and chasing kids all sit under non-exercise activity thermogenesis (NEAT). Add a couple of short walks and you’ve got a large share of your daily expenditure right there.
Calories Burned From Everyday Tasks: Realistic Ranges
The best way to think about daily burn is by intensity bands. Light, moderate, and brisk movement each have typical energy costs. Your total depends on body weight, how fast you move, and how long you keep moving.
Common Daily Activities And Typical Burn At 70 Kg
This table uses standard MET values from the Compendium and a 70-kg adult. Quick math: calories in 30 minutes ≈ MET × 36.75.
| Activity | MET | 30 Min (kcal) |
|---|---|---|
| Sitting Quietly (Reading) | 1.3 | ~48 |
| Standing, Casual | 1.8 | ~66 |
| Cooking/Meal Prep | 2.5 | ~92 |
| Dishwashing By Hand | 2.3 | ~85 |
| Light Cleaning/Tidying | 2.3 | ~85 |
| Vacuuming | 3.5 | ~129 |
| Mopping/Scrubbing Floors | 4.5 | ~166 |
| Carrying Groceries (Walking) | 4.0 | ~147 |
| Walking 3.0 mph | 3.3 | ~121 |
| Walking 3.5 mph | 4.3 | ~158 |
| Climbing Stairs | 8.0 | ~294 |
| Gardening, General | 4.0 | ~147 |
| Child Care, Active | 3.0 | ~110 |
Those numbers scale with body weight. A 57-kg person would burn a bit less; an 84-kg person more. Set targets that match your daily calorie needs and then use the MET math to plan your day.
What Actually Drives Your Burn
Body Size And Composition
Heavier bodies use more energy for the same task. Muscle tissue also costs a little more to run than fat tissue, which nudges daily totals up for very active, muscular people.
Movement Intensity
Intensity is captured by METs. One MET is quiet sitting. An activity with 4 METs costs about four times resting. The Compendium of Physical Activities lists METs for hundreds of everyday actions, from folding laundry to climbing stairs. It’s a handy reference when you want a defensible estimate.
Minutes That Actually Happen
Time wins. Ten minutes here and there can push your day over the line. A few brisk laps in the hallway, a staircase instead of an elevator, and cooking at home can add 200–400 extra calories without scheduling a gym session.
How To Estimate Your Own Numbers Without Fancy Tools
1) Pick Your Weight And A Task
Use a recent body weight in kilograms. Then choose a task and grab its MET from the Compendium or a reliable table.
2) Use The One-Line Formula
Estimated calories per minute ≈ MET × 3.5 × weight(kg) ÷ 200. Multiply by minutes to get a total. Example for a 70-kg adult vacuuming (3.5 MET) for 20 minutes: 3.5 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 × 20 ≈ ~86 kcal.
3) Layer Tasks For A Day Total
Stack small blocks. Five minutes of stairs here, a 15-minute errand walk there, two rounds of dishes, and a half hour of cooking can land you an extra 400–600 calories burned across the day.
Everyday Scenarios That Add Up
Desk-Heavy Workday
Let’s say you sit for most of the day, but you add breaks. Walk five minutes at an easy pace once an hour for eight hours. That’s 40 minutes at roughly 3.0–3.5 METs. Add lunch prep (20 minutes, ~2.5 METs) and a few flights of stairs (5 minutes at ~8 METs). You’re looking at 250–400 calories from movement outside formal exercise.
Errand-Packed Afternoon
Walk to the store and back for 30–40 minutes at a steady pace, carry two bags for 10 minutes, and cook dinner for 30 minutes. That cluster often nets 300–500 calories depending on speed and weight carried.
Active Caregiving Day
Light housework in short bursts, frequent standing, playing with kids, and meal prep can rival a long walk. Many caregivers hit 400–700 calories from day-to-day movement alone.
Where Official Guidance Fits In
Public health recommendations push for at least 150 minutes each week of moderate-intensity movement or 75 minutes of vigorous movement. That’s on top of your baseline NEAT—walking, chores, and errands. If you want a simple intensity check, use the “talk test” from the CDC: during moderate movement you can speak in full sentences; during vigorous movement you can only say a few words before stopping for breath. See the federal Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans and the CDC’s plain-English page on judging intensity for details.
Make The Numbers Practical
Turn Chores Into Short Work Bouts
Batch vacuuming, mopping, and carrying laundry up stairs. Rotate tasks that raise your breathing just a bit. Those are the ones that move your totals the most in the least time.
Walk The “I Was Going Anyway” Trips
Park farther once. Take the stairs for one or two floors. Pick a coffee spot that adds a five-minute stroll each way. It’s easy, repeatable, and low-friction.
Stand, Then Step
Standing beats sitting. Stepping beats standing. A standing break every 30–60 minutes keeps you fresh and nudges calories upward.
Quick Planner: Ten-Minute Blocks At 70 Kg
Use these estimates as building blocks. Swap tasks to match your day.
| Task | MET | 10 Min (kcal) |
|---|---|---|
| Sitting/Email | 1.3 | ~16 |
| Standing Phone Call | 1.8 | ~22 |
| Cooking Dinner | 2.5 | ~31 |
| Light Cleaning | 2.3 | ~28 |
| Vacuuming | 3.5 | ~43 |
| Mopping/Scrub | 4.5 | ~55 |
| Walking 3.0 mph | 3.3 | ~40 |
| Walking 3.5 mph | 4.3 | ~53 |
| Climb Stairs | 8.0 | ~98 |
| Yard/Garden | 4.0 | ~49 |
Sample Day Totals You Can Replicate
500–700 kcal From “Normal Life”
- Four 10-minute walks at an easy-to-steady pace
- Twenty minutes of vacuuming or mopping
- Thirty minutes of meal prep
- Five minutes of stairs in short bursts
Those blocks add up fast. If weight loss is a goal, pair movement with a steady nutrition plan that fits your tastes and schedule.
Estimating For Different Body Weights
Use A Simple Multiplier
Because kcal/min scales with body weight, you can adjust the table quickly. If you weigh 84 kg, multiply the 70-kg numbers by 1.2. If you weigh 57 kg, multiply by ~0.8. The math won’t be perfect, yet it’s close enough for planning.
When You Want A Published Table
Harvard Health publishes a popular 30-minute chart for multiple weights, including walking speeds and common tasks. Pair that with the CDC’s guidance on intensity to double-check your pace and expectations.
Tiny Tweaks That Raise NEAT All Week
Build A “Default Walk”
Pick one daily occasion you’ll always walk: a mid-morning lap, the school run, or a post-dinner stroll. Predictable beats heroic.
Carry Things Once
Use a backpack or tote and distribute load across both sides. Carrying adds a mild strength component and bumps METs compared with hands-free walking.
Take The Stairs For Short Rises
One or two flights per trip is enough. Multiple tiny climbs across the day beat a single long climb you’ll skip tomorrow.
Cook More Meals At Home
Shopping, chopping, and stovetop time replace sitting. It also helps you control portions and sodium, which supports heart health.
Frequently Missed Factors
Fidgeting Counts
Small, frequent postural shifts raise energy use above quiet sitting. If a long meeting is on your calendar, stand for a few minutes and shift your weight periodically.
Temperature And Terrain
Hot, cold, windy, or hilly conditions increase cost at the same pace. Indoor routes and neutral conditions will feel easier and burn fewer calories than the same time outdoors on hills.
Recovery And Sleep
Underslept days feel heavier and lead to fewer steps. Protect sleep so the rest of your plan is doable.
When To Cross-Check With Official Sources
Use government or academic pages whenever you want hard numbers or definitions. The Compendium offers MET values for tasks from typing to stair climbing, while the federal booklet defines weekly targets and the “talk test.” If you like a rule of thumb, the CDC’s plain guide to measuring intensity is a great bookmark during walks and chores.
Want a deeper primer on energy balance and how to create a steady shortfall? Try our calorie deficit guide.