Weekly calorie burn depends on your minutes, intensity, body weight, and daily movement outside workouts.
Time
Time
Weekly Burn
Basic Plan
- 30 min brisk walk, 5 days
- 2 short strength sessions
- More steps in daily errands
Low lift
Better Plan
- 45 min moderate cardio, 4 days
- 1 interval day at hard pace
- Stand, stroll, or cycle for errands
Steady change
Best Push
- 60 min cardio, 4–5 days
- Intervals + hills twice
- Solid sleep and protein target
High burn
What Drives Weekly Energy Burn
You create energy burn across the week from four levers: your planned workouts, unstructured movement such as steps and chores, your muscle mass, and your body size. Minutes and intensity move the needle the most in the short term. Muscle mass and daily movement compound the effect.
Public guidance sets a clear floor for minutes. Adults benefit from at least 150 minutes of moderate aerobic activity each week or 75 minutes of vigorous work, plus 2 days of strength training. That floor keeps you healthy and can chip away at energy balance when food stays steady. (CDC recommendations)
Weekly Calories Burned: Realistic Targets
Let’s translate minutes into energy. The math below uses standard metabolic equivalent (MET) values and the common formula calories per minute = 0.0175 × MET × body weight in kilograms. Brisk walking sits near 3.5–4 METs; easy running falls near 7–8 METs according to the published compendium of activities.
Quick Weekly Estimates From Minutes And Weight
The table shows typical weekly energy from two classic targets: 150 minutes at a brisk pace and 75 minutes at an easy run. It gives a fast sense of scale for different body sizes.
| Body Weight | 150 Min Brisk Walk (~3.5–4 MET) |
75 Min Easy Run (~7–8 MET) |
|---|---|---|
| 60 kg (132 lb) | ~550–600 kcal/week | ~550–650 kcal/week |
| 70 kg (154 lb) | ~620–700 kcal/week | ~650–800 kcal/week |
| 80 kg (176 lb) | ~700–800 kcal/week | ~750–900 kcal/week |
Most plans click into place once you set your daily calorie needs and keep food steady for a few weeks.
Why Ranges Beat One Exact Number
Two people can log the same minutes and still land at different totals. Pace changes METs, terrain adds or subtracts effort, and fitness shifts heart rate at a given speed. That’s why the estimates above show bands, not a single figure.
Where Strength Work Fits
Two weekly strength sessions don’t burn as much during the hour as a hard run, but they boost lean mass when paired with protein. More muscle raises day-to-day expenditure and helps you push cardio harder. The CDC places muscle work alongside cardio for adults for that reason. (CDC guidance)
How To Estimate Your Own Number
Use a simple three-step pass to get a workable personal range you can refine over time.
Step 1: Pick An Anchor Plan
Choose one of these starting templates for the next two weeks: 150 minutes moderate cardio; 210 minutes moderate; or 90 minutes mixed with one interval day. Keep pace repeatable and log your sessions.
Step 2: Apply The MET Formula
Convert body weight to kilograms. Multiply 0.0175 by the activity’s MET and your weight to get calories per minute. Multiply by your weekly minutes for the estimate. The MET listings in the Compendium place brisk walking near 3.5–4, cycling around 6–8 for a steady ride, and easy running around 7–8. (Compendium of Physical Activities)
Step 3: Sanity-Check Against Your Trend
Keep food steady for two weeks and watch the scale and waist. If scale loss is racing faster than 1–2 pounds per week, you’re probably running a bigger energy gap than needed. The CDC frames a 1–2 lb rate as a steady target, often created by a daily gap around 500–1,000 kcal when diet and movement are combined. (CDC weight-loss module)
Sample Weekly Setups That Add Up
Here are three workable mixes that match common schedules. Slide minutes up or down based on how your legs and calendar feel.
Brisk-Walk Base (Low Stress)
- 30 minutes brisk pace, 5 days
- Two 15-minute errand walks or step breaks daily
- Two 30-minute strength circuits at home
Weekly energy: ~600–1,000 kcal for many adults, higher for larger bodies or hilly routes.
Steady Cycling Mix (Moderate Stress)
- 45 minutes steady ride, 4 days
- One day of short hills or intervals, 20–30 minutes
- Two brief strength sessions
Weekly energy: ~1,000–1,600 kcal when rides sit near 6–8 METs and total minutes reach 210–240.
Run-Heavy Week (Higher Stress)
- 3 easy runs of 35–45 minutes
- 1 interval or tempo run, 20–30 minutes of work time
- 2 short strength sessions
Weekly energy: ~1,200–2,000+ kcal depending on pace and weight.
Minute Swaps That Raise The Total Fast
To nudge burn upward without doubling time, trade some moderate minutes for harder blocks. A 20-minute interval set at a high effort can match or exceed the energy from a longer easy session. The CDC’s page on measuring intensity explains how breathing and talk test cues map to moderate and vigorous effort. (Intensity basics)
Reality Check On The “3,500 Per Pound” Rule
The old rule of thumb—about 3,500 kcal per pound—helps with simple math, but bodies adapt. As weight drops, the gap needed for the next pound grows. That’s why the NIH Body Weight Planner exists: it models the slowdown so you set a realistic timeline. (NIH planner)
Handy 30-Minute Session Burns
Use these ballpark values for a single 30-minute block at a steady pace. Numbers assume flat ground and continuous movement. If your route has hills or your pace is spicy, you’ll land higher.
| Activity (~MET) | 60 kg | 80 kg |
|---|---|---|
| Brisk Walk 4 MET | ~125–140 kcal | ~165–190 kcal |
| Cycling Steady 6–8 MET | ~190–280 kcal | ~255–375 kcal |
| Easy Run 7–8 MET | ~220–280 kcal | ~295–375 kcal |
| Lap Swim 6–9 MET | ~190–315 kcal | ~255–420 kcal |
| Jump Rope 10–12 MET | ~315–380 kcal | ~420–510 kcal |
NEAT: The Hidden Weekly Booster
Non-exercise activity thermogenesis (NEAT) often beats gym time over seven days. Think steps during calls, stairs, grocery runs, and chores. A busy day with 8–10k steps can add a few hundred calories on top of scheduled workouts, while a chair-bound day can erase that edge. Small, repeatable habits win here: park farther, stand for a block of emails, walk five minutes before every meal.
Strength, Protein, And Sleep Keep The Burn Coming
Muscle is metabolically active tissue. Two short full-body sessions each week stop the typical drop in resting expenditure that can come with dieting. Aim to hit all major groups with pushes, pulls, hinges, squats, and carries. Pair that with steady protein across meals and enough sleep to recover. This combo lets you keep minutes high without feeling wrecked.
Pacing The Ramp So You Don’t Stall
Raise total minutes by no more than 10–20% per week. Swap in one interval day only after a base of easy minutes feels automatic. If soreness or fatigue builds, hold the line for a week. The goal is a plan you can repeat, not a single peak week.
When Exercise Alone Moves The Scale
Exercise can create a sizeable gap when workout minutes climb and NEAT stays high. Many adults see steady progress when weekly training burn reaches the low thousands and food intake stays consistent. The CDC’s healthy-weight materials frame a steady rate of 1–2 lb per week as a workable pace created by a daily gap around 500–1,000 kcal through some mix of diet and movement. (CDC reference)
Safety, Fit, And Personalization
Match session choices to your joints and training age. If running irritates your knees, use cycling, rowing, or the pool to hit vigorous minutes. If heat drains you, train earlier in the day. The CDC’s guide to what counts for adults lists plenty of options for building minutes without locking you to one sport. (What counts)
Putting It All Together For Next Week
Pick a plan, set session times on your calendar, and keep pace consistent for two weeks. Track minutes, steps, and, if weight change is your goal, your food. Adjust the following week based on your trend: if weight is flat and you want it lower, add 30–60 minutes, raise session intensity once, or tidy snacks. If energy dips, hold minutes steady and push sleep up by 30 minutes per night.
One Gentle Nudge If You Want More Structure
Want a step-by-step walkthrough? Try our calorie deficit guide.