How Many Calories Do Different Activities Burn? | Real-World Ranges

Calories burned by common activities vary by body size and intensity; a 70 kg person typically expends about 100–700+ kcal per hour.

How Calorie Burn Is Estimated

Most researchers use METs (metabolic equivalents) to standardize effort across tasks. One MET is quiet sitting. Each activity has an assigned MET value based on oxygen use in studies. To turn a MET score into energy, use this formula: kcal = MET × 3.5 × body kg ÷ 200 × minutes. This comes from exercise physiology texts and clinical handouts used in sports medicine programs.

What A MET Looks Like In Daily Life

Light tasks sit near 2–3 METs, a relaxed walk lands around 3–4, and steady jogging jumps to ~7–10. Group classes, field sports, and hills push the number up. The range matters because that’s where your hourly burn swings from modest to large.

Calories Burned Across Activities: Practical Ranges

The table below uses representative MET values from the Compendium and converts them to hourly energy for a 70 kg adult. Real-world numbers swing with pace, grade, wind, and technique. Use this as a starting point to plan sessions and to compare options.

Activity METs kcal/hour (70 kg)
Sitting Quietly 1.0 ~245
Standing Desk Work 1.8 ~440
Leisure Walk ~2.5 mph 3.0 ~735
Brisk Walk ~3.5 mph 4.3 ~1,055
Hiking (Flat Trail) 6.0 ~1,475
Stair Climbing (Easy) 4.0 ~980
Stair Climbing (Vigorous) 8.8 ~2,160
Cycling 10–12 mph 6.0 ~1,475
Cycling 14–16 mph 10.0 ~2,460
Elliptical (Moderate) 5.0 ~1,230
Rowing Machine (Moderate) 7.0 ~1,720
Swimming Laps (Easy) 6.0 ~1,475
Swimming Laps (Fast) 9.5 ~2,335
Running 5 mph (12 min/mi) 8.3 ~2,040
Running 6 mph (10 min/mi) 9.8 ~2,410
Running 7.5 mph (8 min/mi) 11.5 ~2,830
Jump Rope (Fast) 12.3 ~3,030
Resistance Training (Circuit) 5.0 ~1,230
Weightlifting (Heavy) 6.0 ~1,475
Dancing (Zumba-Style) 7.5 ~1,845
Basketball Game 8.0 ~1,965
Soccer Match 10.0 ~2,460
Tennis (Singles) 8.0 ~1,965
Pickleball (Casual) 4.1 ~1,005
Yard Work (Mowing Walk-Behind) 5.5 ~1,350
Cleaning (Vigorous) 3.5 ~860
Carrying Groceries 3.0 ~735

Targets land better once you know your daily calorie needs. From there, picking a mix of walking, rides, and short high-effort bouts helps you hit a weekly energy budget without making every day a grind.

How Body Weight And Time Change The Math

The equation scales linearly with both mass and minutes. Double the minutes and you double the calories. Heavier bodies spend more energy for the same task because moving and cooling cost more energy. That’s why two people can share a pace yet finish with different totals.

Moderate Versus Vigorous Work

Moderate sessions raise breathing and heart rate while you can still chat. Vigorous sessions make speech choppy and breathing heavy. You can check your pace using the CDC’s simple talk test, and match sessions to recovery and schedule. The idea is to mix steady sessions with a couple of spicy days so you progress without burnout.

From METs To Your Number: A Walkthrough

Use this quick flow:

  1. Pick a MET from a trusted table for the activity and pace.
  2. Multiply MET × 3.5 × body kg ÷ 200 × minutes.
  3. Adjust up for hills, pack weight, heat, or chaotic play.

Example: a 70 kg person walking at ~4 MET for 45 minutes: 4 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 × 45 ≈ 221 kcal. Bump the pace to 6 MET and the same 45 minutes lands near 332 kcal.

Choosing Activities That Fit Your Goal

If you want steady weight control with minimal joint stress, stick with brisk walks, easy spins, and light strength circuits. Chasing a larger burn in less time? Shorter runs, stairs, jump rope, or sport play deliver big spikes. Rotate high-effort days with easier movement and sleep-friendly evenings.

Intensity Cues You Can Trust

A heart-rate strap or watch helps, but simple signals work: can you speak full sentences, or only a few words? Do you need a breath every few steps? Use those checks to keep sessions in the zone you planned.

Why Your Burn Might Differ From A Chart

Trained technique reduces “wasted” motion. Trail grade, wind, and temperature shift effort. Some days you’re fresh; other days you’re not. Charts are estimates; your feel and logged trend line tell the fuller story.

Evidence Base You Can Rely On

The standard reference for MET values is the Compendium of Physical Activities, maintained by researchers who catalog oxygen-cost studies for everyday tasks and sports. For gauging how hard a session feels, the CDC’s guidance on measuring intensity explains the “talk test” and how relative effort changes person to person.

Build A Week That Balances Burn And Recovery

A balanced setup could be two days of vigorous work split by easy days, one longer moderate session on the weekend, and short movement breaks sprinkled on workdays. Strength twice per week supports joints and keeps daily burn from collapsing when you’re sitting more.

Seven-Day Sample Split

  • Mon: 30 min brisk walk + 15 min mobility
  • Tue: 25 min intervals on a bike (work/rest 1:1) + short core
  • Wed: Easy steps, stretch, errands on foot
  • Thu: 30–40 min bodyweight circuit
  • Fri: Rest walk + light strength accessories
  • Sat: 60–90 min hike or ride
  • Sun: Nap pace walk or swim

Quick Calculator Table For Different Weights

Use these ready numbers to plan an hour at two common intensities. Pick the column that matches your task.

Body Weight ~4 MET (Brisk Walk) ~8 MET (Steady Run/Ride)
60 kg ~420 kcal/h ~840 kcal/h
70 kg ~490 kcal/h ~980 kcal/h
80 kg ~560 kcal/h ~1,120 kcal/h
90 kg ~630 kcal/h ~1,260 kcal/h

Turn Numbers Into Habits

Stack short blocks: ten minutes before breakfast, a lunchtime loop, and a post-dinner stroll. Add one higher-effort day only when recovery feels solid. Keep shoes, a jump rope, or a kettlebell where you see them. Small prompts beat willpower.

Safety, Recovery, And Progress

Ease into new intensities. Warm up with five minutes of easy motion. If you’re returning from injury or managing a condition, pick lower-impact modes like cycling, swimming, or a rower. Strength work twice weekly protects joints and keeps your total burn steadier across the week.

Hydration And Heat

In hot or humid weather, slow down and shorten bouts. Shade and a small bottle help. If an activity already sits in the high bucket for you, high heat can turn it into a red-line effort fast.

Make Planning Simple

Pick two “default” sessions you can do anywhere, one fun sport for variety, and one longer session you enjoy. Track minutes and a simple 1–10 effort score in a notes app. The trend line matters more than any single day’s count.

Want a step-by-step plan that connects movement with eating targets? Try our calorie deficit guide.