A 15-minute run burns roughly 120–210 calories for most adults, depending on pace, body weight, and terrain.
Calories (Easy)
Calories (Moderate)
Calories (Fast)
Basic Steady
- Comfortable pace on flat ground
- Nasal breathing test
- Finish feeling fresh
Easy day
Intervals Mix
- 30s brisk / 60s easy
- 4–6 repeats after warmup
- Short cool-down
Better stimulus
Hill Repeats
- 4–6 climbs, smooth form
- Walk down recovery
- Soft-surface bonus
High effort
Calories Burned In A 15-Minute Run: The Fast Way
Here’s the simple rule coaches use. Calories burned during running scale with the activity’s metabolic intensity (measured in METs), your body weight in kilograms, and time in hours:
Calories ≈ MET × weight(kg) × time(hours)
One MET is the energy cost of resting; running speeds carry higher MET values. Fifteen minutes is 0.25 hour, so the quick math becomes Calories ≈ MET × weight × 0.25. If you know the pace you plan to hold, grab the matching MET and plug it in.
Typical METs For Common Running Speeds
The table below uses widely cited MET values for running speeds and shows the estimated burn for a 70 kg adult over fifteen minutes. Swap in your weight with the same MET to personalize it.
| Pace (mph) | MET | 15-Min Burn (70 kg) |
|---|---|---|
| 5.0 (12:00/mi) | 8.3 | 8.3 × 70 × 0.25 ≈ 145 kcal |
| 6.0 (10:00/mi) | 9.8 | 9.8 × 70 × 0.25 ≈ 171 kcal |
| 7.0 (8:34/mi) | 11.0 | 11.0 × 70 × 0.25 ≈ 193 kcal |
| 8.0 (7:30/mi) | 11.8 | 11.8 × 70 × 0.25 ≈ 207 kcal |
Those figures sit inside the common 120–210 calorie range for a quarter-hour jog to fast run. If weight loss is your goal, matching intake to output matters just as much as the run itself, which is why dialing in your daily calorie needs helps the training add up without guesswork.
Where These Numbers Come From
Researchers compile activity energy costs in the Compendium of Physical Activities. In that reference, 5 mph sits near 8.3 MET, 6 mph near 9.8, 7 mph near 11.0, and 8 mph near 11.8. By definition, 1 MET ≈ 1 kcal per kilogram per hour, so multiplying MET by body mass and time yields a reasonable estimate.
Make The Estimate Yours
No two fifteen-minute runs are identical. A few variables push the number up or down. Tweak the inputs below to get closer to your reality.
Body Weight
Because the formula multiplies by kilograms, heavier runners burn more at the same pace and time. Lighter runners burn less. The second table shows quick multipliers versus a 70 kg baseline so you can scale the earlier chart without recalculating METs.
Pace And Intensity
Speed is the big dial. Bumping from an easy jog to a threshold effort lifts METs, which pushes the burn higher. On days with strides or hill surges, the spikes in intensity nudge the average up a bit, too.
Incline, Surface, And Wind
Climbing adds cost; downhill reduces it. Soft terrain like sand or mud also bumps energy demand. Strong headwinds act like a light incline, while a tailwind trims the effort.
Form And Economy
Two runners at the same speed can show different oxygen costs. Cadence, ground contact time, footwear, and arm swing affect running economy. Over weeks of training, efficiency gains mean the same pace demands fewer calories.
Heat, Humidity, And Altitude
Hot days shift blood flow to the skin for cooling, which raises effort at a given speed. High altitude can do the same until you acclimate. Hydration also matters; mild dehydration raises perceived exertion and can slow the pace.
Fifteen-Minute Running Plans That Fit
Short sessions shine when they have a job. Pick a pattern that lines up with your week and your goals.
Steady Aerobic
Settle into a comfortable pace where you can speak in short phrases. Keep the effort even on flat ground and finish feeling like you could jog longer. This builds consistency without draining recovery.
How To Do It
- Minute 0–3: easy jog, loosen shoulders.
- Minute 3–13: smooth, steady pace.
- Minute 13–15: down-shift and coast home.
Speed Touch
Warm up for a few minutes, then alternate 30 seconds brisk and 60 seconds easy. You lift average METs, recruit more muscle fibers, and keep the total session short enough to fit a busy day.
How To Do It
- Minute 0–4: easy jog.
- Minute 4–14: 30s brisk / 60s easy × 6–7 rounds.
- Minute 14–15: easy cool-down.
Hill Snack
Jog to a short slope and run four to six controlled climbs at a strong but smooth effort, walking down between repeats. Hills add intensity without pounding the joints.
How To Do It
- Minute 0–5: easy jog to the hill.
- Minute 5–13: 4–6 climbs of ~20–30s, walk down recoveries.
- Minute 13–15: easy jog home.
Calorie Math Examples By Level
Use these snapshots to sanity-check your own number. Each uses the MET rule and a round-number body weight.
New Runner
Body weight: 60 kg. Pace: gentle jog near 5 mph (~8.3 MET). Calories ≈ 8.3 × 60 × 0.25 ≈ 125 kcal.
Intermediate
Body weight: 75 kg. Pace: steady near 6 mph (~9.8 MET). Calories ≈ 9.8 × 75 × 0.25 ≈ 184 kcal.
Stronger Runner
Body weight: 90 kg. Pace: brisk near 7 mph (~11.0 MET). Calories ≈ 11.0 × 90 × 0.25 ≈ 248 kcal.
Safety, Recovery, And Context
Stack short runs alongside sleep, strength, and sensible fueling. That mix supports joints and helps you progress. National guidance classifies running as vigorous aerobic activity; even small chunks contribute to a weekly target of at least 75 minutes of vigorous cardio. Short bouts count, so a quarter-hour session has real value. See the HHS activity guidelines for the full picture.
Second Table: Scale By Body Weight
Use these multipliers to scale the earlier 6 mph estimate (9.8 MET) for different body weights. Multiply the number in the middle column by 171 kcal (the 70 kg value at 6 mph) to get your fifteen-minute figure.
| Body Weight | Scale Vs 70 kg | Example At 6 mph |
|---|---|---|
| 55 kg (121 lb) | 0.79 | 171 × 0.79 ≈ 135 kcal |
| 70 kg (154 lb) | 1.00 | 171 kcal |
| 90 kg (198 lb) | 1.29 | 171 × 1.29 ≈ 221 kcal |
How To Nudge The Burn Up Without Trouble
Add A Mild Incline
On a treadmill, set 1–2% to mimic wind and lift cost slightly. Outdoors, pick a route with a gentle rise and keep form tall.
Trim The Coasting
In an interval set, shorten the easy segments a touch. Keep quality high and hold smooth mechanics.
Use Soft Ground Smartly
Grass feels kind; sand is sneaky-hard. Start with short bouts on softer surfaces and build gradually.
Common Missteps To Avoid
Going Out Too Hard
Spiking heart rate in the first minute can turn a quick session into a slog. Warm up and let speed come to you.
Skipping Strength
Two short blocks per week for calves, quads, hips, and core protect tendons and make running feel lighter.
Chasing Device Calories
Wrist sensors estimate; they don’t measure heat. Use the trend, not the single number, and double-check with the MET method above.
How To Estimate Your Own Number In Seconds
Step 1 — Convert Weight To Kilograms
Divide pounds by 2.205. A 180 lb runner is ~81.6 kg.
Step 2 — Pick A MET For Your Pace
Quick guide: ~8.3 for 5 mph, ~9.8 for 6 mph, ~11.0 for 7 mph, ~11.8 for 8 mph.
Step 3 — Multiply
Calories ≈ MET × weight × 0.25. With 81.6 kg at 6 mph: 9.8 × 81.6 × 0.25 ≈ 200 kcal.
Bottom Line
A quarter-hour of running is small on the clock and big on consistency. At common training paces the burn usually lands near the 120–210 range. If you want tighter numbers, grab the MET for your pace, multiply by your weight, and divide by four. Log a few sessions and watch the trend—not just a single run—since pace, hills, and heat all move the dial.
Want a broader primer on energy balance? Try our calorie deficit guide next.