An hour of exercise burns roughly 240–1,000+ calories depending on body weight, workout type, and intensity.
Light Effort
Moderate Effort
Vigorous Effort
Basic Session
- 10-min warm-up
- 40-min steady zone
- 10-min cool-down
Low-stress, consistent
Better Mix
- 15-min tempo
- 20-min intervals
- 15-min skills/core
Bump the burn
Best Push
- 6×4-min hard reps
- 2-min easy between
- 10-min cool-down
Max output day
Calorie burn over 60 minutes swings a lot from person to person. Body mass, the activity you pick, and how hard you go decide most of the spread. The numbers below use MET values (a standard way to describe the energy cost of activities) and common body weights. You can plug in your own weight with the quick formula later in this guide.
Calories Burned In A 60-Minute Workout: What Changes The Number
Three levers move the per-hour total. First is your weight. A heavier body expends more energy to do the same movement, so two people side-by-side won’t match calories even at the same pace. Second is intensity. A steady jog sits far below hard intervals. Third is the movement itself. Rowing, uphill running, and jump rope tax more muscle groups and drive the number up faster than a slow cycle on flat ground. The CDC intensity guide explains simple cues like the talk test to gauge effort without gadgets.
What “Per Hour” Looks Like Across Common Activities
To keep it practical, the first table groups everyday workouts with estimated calories for two weights. The values come from widely used MET references and Harvard’s energy tables; they’re estimates, not lab-measured for you.
| Activity (Typical Pace) | 125 lb (56.7 kg) | 185 lb (83.9 kg) |
|---|---|---|
| Walking, Brisk ~3.5 mph | 240–300 | 355–445 |
| Jogging ~5 mph | 480–560 | 710–830 |
| Running ~6–7.5 mph | 600–900 | 885–1,330 |
| Cycling, Leisure <10 mph | 240–300 | 355–445 |
| Cycling, 12–13.9 mph | 480–600 | 710–885 |
| Elliptical, Moderate Effort | 420–560 | 630–830 |
| Rowing Machine, Moderate | 420–560 | 630–830 |
| Swimming, Laps Easy–Steady | 420–600 | 630–885 |
| HIIT/Boot Camp (work:rest) | 600–900 | 885–1,330 |
| Strength Training, General | 300–420 | 445–630 |
| Power Lifting Session | 360–520 | 530–780 |
| Hiking, Hilly Terrain | 360–540 | 530–800 |
Snacks and portions land better once you set your daily calorie needs. That baseline makes your workout burn more meaningful than a stand-alone number.
Why Your Wearable Rarely Matches Charts
Wrist devices estimate energy from heart rate, movement, and personal data. Charts use METs, which are averages from research on oxygen use. Both methods point in the right direction, but neither knows your exact muscle efficiency or day-to-day fatigue. Treat any single readout as a range, not a verdict.
Use The MET Formula For Your Own Body Weight
Here’s the quick math many sports-medicine clinics teach: calories per minute ≈ 0.0175 × MET × body weight (kg). Multiply by 60 for an hour. That constant (0.0175) comes from the definition of 1 MET as 3.5 mL O₂ per kg per minute.
Common MET Values For Popular Workouts
The Compendium table below lists typical METs for widely used paces. You’ll find long lists by sport in the published tables; this trimmed set keeps it practical.
| Activity | METs | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Walking 3–3.5 mph | 3.5–4.3 | Talk in full sentences |
| Jogging ~5 mph | 8.0 | Breathing hard, steady |
| Running ~6–7.5 mph | 9.8–11.5 | Few words at a time |
| Cycling <10 mph | 4.0 | Flat, relaxed spin |
| Cycling 12–13.9 mph | 8.0 | Steady road effort |
| Rowing Machine, Moderate | 7.0 | Even strokes, steady |
| Lap Swim, Freestyle | 6.0–9.8 | From easy to hard sets |
| HIIT (work:rest blocks) | 8.0–12.0 | Depends on work ratio |
| Strength Training, General | 3.5–6.0 | From machine to circuits |
| Hiking, Hilly | 6.0–7.0 | Packs and climbs raise it |
Step-By-Step: Plug In Your Numbers
- Pick the MET for your workout from the table.
- Convert your weight to kilograms (lbs ÷ 2.2).
- Calories per minute = 0.0175 × MET × kg.
- Per hour = that result × 60.
Say you’re 70 kg and run for an hour at ~6 mph (about 9.8 MET). Your math is 0.0175 × 9.8 × 70 × 60 ≈ 720 calories. That lands inside the high-effort range shown earlier.
What Counts As Light, Moderate, Or Vigorous
Effort isn’t only pace. Breathing, ability to talk, and how your legs feel tell the story. With moderate work you can speak in short lines; with vigorous work you grab a few words at a time. The CDC offers plain lists of activities that fall in each band along with the talk test cues. See the intensity cues.
Sample 60-Minute Templates By Goal
Steady Burn (Cardio-Led)
Warm up 10 minutes, then hold a pace where you can speak in phrases for 40 minutes. Finish with 10 minutes of easy work. Walk, cycle, row, or swim. This plan fits days when you want energy without a massive recovery bill.
Intervals For A Bigger Hour
Warm up 10 minutes. Do 6 rounds of 4 minutes hard with 2 minutes easy. Wrap with 10 minutes easy movement. Choose a modality you can push safely: treadmill, bike, rower, track, pool, or bodyweight circuits. The average calories climb because the work portions punch above a steady tempo.
Strength-Forward Session
Alternate compound lifts with short bouts of cardio. You get muscle stimulus plus a steady heart rate. Think supersets like squats with a 2-minute row, or push presses with a brisk walk on an incline. The per-hour total often sits between pure cardio moderate work and a hard interval day.
How To Nudge Your Per-Hour Burn Up (Safely)
Add Slope Or Resistance
Small tweaks compound over an hour. A 2–4% incline on the treadmill or a tougher gear on the bike bumps the MET rating. You’ll feel the shift in breathing right away.
Extend The Hard Parts, Not Just The Clock
Two extra work intervals can add more calories than tacking on 10 slow minutes at the end. Quality beats low-intent extra time.
Use Bigger Muscle Groups
Total-body moves like rowing, swimming, or loaded carries recruit more muscle, which tends to raise oxygen use and energy cost beyond isolated work.
Where “1,000 Calories An Hour” Comes From
Big numbers show up when speed and resistance climb for a trained person. Fast running, hard cycling, or repeated all-out blocks can push METs into double digits. That level is intense and not the right target every day. Many adults will get plenty of health payoff from moderate zones that land closer to the middle ranges listed above. The adult guidelines suggest building toward weekly totals of moderate or vigorous activity plus two days of muscle work.
Calories Burned Per Hour By Intensity Band (70 kg Example)
This quick view uses a 70 kg baseline and common METs. It helps you map expectations before you hit start. MET bands align with CDC intensity descriptions and Compendium categories.
| Intensity Band | MET Range | Calories / Hour |
|---|---|---|
| Light (easy spin, slow walk) | 2.0–3.0 | 210–315 |
| Moderate (brisk walk, steady cycle) | 4.0–6.0 | 420–630 |
| Vigorous (tempo run, intervals) | 8.0–12.0 | 840–1,260 |
FAQ-Free Tips That Save Time
Pick A Pace You Can Repeat
Sustainable work beats hero sessions that wipe you out for two days. Stack hours you can repeat and sprinkle in harder blocks on fresher days.
Fuel And Hydrate Wisely
Arrive fed for long or high-effort hours. A small carb-leaning snack before tough sessions keeps intensity steady. Water does the job for most one-hour blocks.
Track With One Method For A Month
Mixing charts, wearables, and gym machine readouts creates confusion. Pick one method and watch trends. Your pace per heart rate or power on the bike is a better signal than any single calorie number.
What To Do With The Number You Get
Your training total makes sense only next to intake. If the plan is weight change, combine smarter food choices with weekly activity goals from the adult activity guidance. The gap between what you eat and what you burn across the week moves the scale, not one mega session.
Want a deeper walkthrough on energy balance and scaling intake to your goal? Try our calorie deficit guide.