Most anglers burn roughly 110–500 calories per hour during fishing, with higher burn when standing, walking the bank, or wading.
Low Effort (Boat Sitting)
Medium Effort (Shore)
High Effort (Wading)
Relaxed Session
- Sit in a boat or on the ice
- Minimal walking between casts
- Light gear and steady pace
Low effort
Active Shore
- Stand to cast and retrieve
- Short walks along the bank
- Occasional tackle changes
Moderate
Wade & Cast
- Hip or chest waders in current
- Frequent repositioning
- Heavier rod or net work
Higher burn
Fishing Calorie Burn: What Actually Drives The Number
Fishing energy use hinges on effort. Sitting in a canoe with a rod in a holder is closer to rest, while wading a stream in current or walking the bank raises the pace. Researchers capture this spread with MET values (metabolic equivalents). A 2.0 MET session roughly doubles resting energy use; a 6.0 MET session uses about six times resting energy. The Adult Compendium lists common fishing styles with these METs, such as 2.0 for boat sitting, 3.5 for standing on the bank, 4.0 for bank walking, and 6.0 for wading in a stream. See the full activity list on the Adult Compendium page.
How To Turn METs Into Calories
The quick math: calories per hour ≈ MET × body weight in kilograms. That’s why two anglers doing the same thing can see different totals. A 180-lb person (about 81.6 kg) sitting in a boat at 2.0 MET burns near 163 kcal per hour; wading at 6.0 MET lands close to 490 kcal per hour. The method aligns with common exercise science practice and helps compare sessions apples to apples.
What Counts As Light, Moderate, Or Hard Effort?
If you want a plain rule of thumb, use the talk test from the CDC. During a moderate session you can talk but not sing; vigorous work cuts speech to a few words between breaths. That cue helps you sense your intensity on the water even without a watch or tracker. See the CDC page on intensity for a simple rundown.
Hourly Burn Estimates By Body Weight (Boat Sitting Vs. Wading)
The table below uses the Compendium MET values for two common ends of the range: relaxed boat sitting (2.0 MET) and active stream wading (6.0 MET). That spread frames most angling days. Numbers are rounded to keep the table easy to scan.
| Weight (lb) | Boat Sitting — 2.0 MET | Wading In Current — 6.0 MET |
|---|---|---|
| 120 | ≈109 | ≈327 |
| 140 | ≈127 | ≈381 |
| 160 | ≈145 | ≈435 |
| 180 | ≈163 | ≈490 |
| 200 | ≈181 | ≈544 |
| 220 | ≈200 | ≈599 |
| 240 | ≈218 | ≈653 |
| 260 | ≈236 | ≈708 |
Totals climb with movement. Standing to cast raises the rate above sitting. Add short walks between spots and you’ll edge closer to the moderate range. If you’re tracking diet or weight changes, it helps to cross-check against your daily calorie burn so sessions fit the big picture.
Close Variations Of Fishing Effort That Change Calories
Two anglers can share the same lake and finish with different totals. The style and terrain decide most of the spread.
Boat Or Canoe, Mostly Seated (Light)
Here the rod does the work while you sit, monitor line, and reel now and then. The Compendium pegs this at about 2.0 MET—low, steady, gentle. Expect an hourly burn near the “boat sitting” column for your weight. Ice sitting lands in the same ballpark.
Shore Casting While Standing (Moderate)
Standing to cast gives the upper body more time under tension and adds short steps as you adjust. That style shows up near 3.5 MET. On a breezy day with more frequent casts and retrieves, the rate nudges up.
Walking The Bank Or Wading (Higher)
Moving between spots adds sustained leg work. Wading turns that up another notch because water resistance and current require steady effort. The Compendium lists 4.0 MET for bank walking and 6.0 MET for stream wading. Heavier gear and a landing net pull the number higher within that band.
What About Trip Length And Breaks?
Fishing often involves bursts of activity separated by calm minutes. A realistic log treats a day on the water like intervals: some low blocks, some moderate blocks, and the odd high patch during landing or fast wading. An average across the trip gives the truest picture.
Quick Way To Estimate A Trip
Pick the style that dominated your day, then multiply the hourly number by time on task. If you alternated—say, two hours seated and one hour wading—average those blocks. No need to track every cast. The Compendium METs are designed for these practical estimates.
Half-Hour Snapshots For Common Styles
Use this table when you want a fast 30-minute estimate. It uses the same MET values from the Adult Compendium and shows two reference body weights for clarity.
| Style (MET) | 150 lb | 200 lb |
|---|---|---|
| Boat Or Canoe, Sitting (2.0) | ≈68 | ≈91 |
| River Bank, Standing (3.5) | ≈119 | ≈159 |
| River Bank & Walking (4.0) | ≈136 | ≈181 |
| Digging Worms With Shovel (4.3) | ≈146 | ≈195 |
| Stream Fishing In Waders (6.0) | ≈204 | ≈272 |
| Ice Fishing, Sitting (2.0) | ≈68 | ≈91 |
| Crab Fishing (4.5) | ≈153 | ≈204 |
How Gear, Water, And Terrain Nudge Your Burn
Rod, Reel, And Tackle Weight
Light spinning setups keep the effort low across the hour. Heavier saltwater rigs add load to the shoulders and back. Netting and handling larger fish also spikes energy for short bursts.
Wind, Current, And Temperature
Headwinds can lengthen casts and change your stance. Current adds footwork during wading. Cold days layer on clothing weight; hot days increase strain. Both ends of that weather range can lift energy use even when technique stays the same.
Bank Slope And Surface
Uneven banks, rock hopping, or soft sand call for balance and careful steps. Those micro-adjustments add up across a few hours.
How This Article Calculates Calories
All estimates in the tables rely on the MET approach used across exercise science. MET values come from the Adult Compendium’s fishing list, which includes seated boat fishing (2.0), bank standing (3.5), bank walking (4.0), digging worms with a shovel (4.3), stream wading (6.0), and ice fishing while seated (2.0). You can consult the source list on the Compendium fishing & hunting page. The intensity cues referenced here match guidance from the CDC intensity guide, which offers a plain-English way to judge effort without lab gear.
Practical Tips To Raise Or Lower Your Burn
Want A Calmer Day?
- Choose a seated boat or ice setup.
- Keep gear light and close by.
- Plan fewer spot changes to limit walking.
Want A Higher-Burn Session?
- Alternate casts with short bank walks.
- Wade stretches of stream where safe and allowed.
- Carry a landing net and handle more of your own fish care.
Where Calorie Tracking Meets The Rest Of Your Day
Angling can balance desk time, add light to moderate movement, and help you hit a weekly activity target without a formal workout. If fat loss or maintenance is on your mind, compare a typical session against your calories and weight plan and adjust meals around outing days.
Safety, Permission, And Etiquette Still Come First
Always check local rules, permits, and seasons, dress for water and weather, and use stable footing. A safe, steady session you can repeat beats a risky push. Keep hydration with you and pace the day so you leave feeling good rather than drained.
A Handy Way To Log Your Next Trip
Pick the closest style from the tables, note your weight, and save a simple average over total time. Over a season you’ll see patterns—days with lots of bank walking, weekends with calm boat time, and a few higher-effort wading runs. Use that history to plan food and recovery around your best fishing windows.
Want More Movement Ideas After You Reel In?
A short walk after the dock helps stiffness fade and adds a few easy minutes to your day. If you’re building an activity routine beyond the water, you might like our take on the benefits of exercise for day-to-day health.