A typical 5K run burns 250–500 calories for most adults; pace, body weight, and terrain shift your total.
Injury Risk
Effort
Calorie Burn
Beginner Pace
- Even splits
- Walk breaks ok
- Choose flat route
Steady & Safe
Steady Runner
- 10:00 mile target
- Controlled breathing
- Light pre-run snack
Balanced
Speedy 5K
- Short warm-up strides
- Negative split plan
- Quick cadence
Time Goal
Calorie Burn In A 5K Run: What Changes The Number
Two inputs drive the estimate: how long you run and how much you weigh. A third input—how hard the effort is—shows up through a MET value from the Compendium of Physical Activities. A faster clock time pushes MET higher, while a heavier body raises the energy cost each minute.
To keep estimates practical, the table below shows common paces that map to MET values listed for running speeds. The math uses the standard energy equation based on METs, body mass, and minutes on the course.
5K Calorie Estimates By Pace And Weight
| Weight | Pace (Finish Time) | Estimated Calories |
|---|---|---|
| 55 kg | 12:00/mile (~37:17) | 305 kcal |
| 55 kg | 10:00/mile (~31:04) | 278 kcal |
| 55 kg | 8:00/mile (~24:51) | 282 kcal |
| 70 kg | 12:00/mile (~37:17) | 388 kcal |
| 70 kg | 10:00/mile (~31:04) | 354 kcal |
| 70 kg | 8:00/mile (~24:51) | 359 kcal |
| 85 kg | 12:00/mile (~37:17) | 471 kcal |
| 85 kg | 10:00/mile (~31:04) | 430 kcal |
| 85 kg | 8:00/mile (~24:51) | 436 kcal |
These figures come from the MET chart for running at 8.0 mph (11.8 MET), 6–6.3 mph (9.3 MET), and 5.0–5.2 mph (8.5 MET), paired with the standard calorie equation. The Compendium page lists those speeds and values, and the CDC page explains the MET definition and talk-test ranges that relate to effort.
Once you know a rough burn per race, you can size up snacks, gels, and recovery plans against your daily calorie needs and training load. The goal isn’t a perfect number; it’s a stable range that helps you plan pacing and fueling without guesswork.
How The Equation Works
The energy math ties MET, body mass, and minutes together: Calories = MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200 × time (min). One MET matches resting oxygen use at roughly 3.5 mL/kg/min. That’s why the burn rises with both speed and duration—the body uses more oxygen each minute and does so for longer.
For background in plain language, see the CDC MET definition. For the running speeds and METs used in the tables, see the Adult Compendium running METs.
Picking A MET For Your Pace
The Compendium lists METs by running speed. If your average pace lands between listed speeds, pick the closest one that matches effort on the day. Racing on a hot, hilly course? Expect the effective MET to climb. A cool morning on a flat bike path? It drops a notch.
Real-World Tweaks That Shift The Total
Hills. Climbing boosts energy cost since you’re working against gravity. Downhill sections save a touch, but the gain on climbs tends to outweigh the savings.
Surface. Grass or loose gravel adds slippage and stabilizing work. Track or smooth asphalt wastes less movement.
Wind And Heat. Headwinds and hot days add strain. Hydration and pace control matter more on these days.
Carrying Load. A vest, stroller, or backpack adds mass. Even a kilo or two changes the math across 5K.
Running Economy. Two runners at the same time and weight won’t match exactly. One may move more efficiently and burn a little less.
How To Estimate Your Own 5K Burn
Step 1: Grab Your Weight And Time
Use your average race time or a recent training run. Weigh yourself near race day to keep the math close.
Step 2: Choose A MET From The Chart
Match your pace to the nearest entry on the running MET table. If you’re pacing a 10:00 mile, pick the 6–6.3 mph line.
Step 3: Do The Quick Math
Plug numbers into the formula. You can round to keep it simple. Here’s a worked example you can copy with your own values.
Worked Example (70 Kg, 31:04 Finish)
MET 9.3 at 6–6.3 mph × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 × 31.07 ≈ 354 kcal. The result sits in the middle of the range in the first table.
Practical Ways To Nudge The Number
Small choices can steer your energy use without blowing up the race. Use these ideas to steer toward a higher or lower burn, depending on your training needs.
To Burn A Little More
- Add gentle hills to your route.
- Run a negative split, finishing a touch faster.
- Carry water if heat demands it; safety first.
To Keep It Lower
- Pick a flat course and even splits.
- Run before the day heats up.
- Trim extra layers and drop handheld gear.
Second Table: What Changes Your 5K Energy Use
| Factor | Effect On Calories | Quick Tip |
|---|---|---|
| Hills | Up increases; down decreases | Pace climbs, relax on descents |
| Heat/Wind | Higher strain raises burn | Slow a little and hydrate |
| Surface | Softer ground adds work | Use road or track for speed |
| Load | Extra mass raises cost | Carry only what you need |
| Running Economy | Efficient form burns less | Drills and easy miles help |
Fueling And Recovery Ideas
If you run near the shorter end of the time range, a light pre-run snack may be enough. At longer times, sip water and bring a small carb source if heat or hills stack up. Post-run, aim to replace fluids and eat a balanced meal with protein and carbs.
When training weeks include multiple races or tempo days, plan meals against the burn and your schedule. Match snacks to hard days and keep easy days lighter. This balanced approach beats guesswork over time.
Training Pointers For A Faster 5K
Use two workouts per week that raise pace: intervals on a track and a steady tempo. Keep one longer run at a relaxed pace. Strength work twice per week helps with posture and leg drive. Sleep and hydration are the quiet wins that turn into faster splits.
Safety Notes
Build volume in small steps and wear shoes that suit your stride. Warm up with easy jogging, leg swings, and a few short strides. If heat, illness, or pain shows up, back off. A safe day beats a forced pace.
Want a deeper read on fat-loss planning after you estimate your race burn? Try our calorie deficit guide for practical steps.