Downhill skiing burns about 300–600 calories per hour for a 70-kg adult; cross-country often reaches 700–1,000+ with race-level effort.
Low Pace
Medium Pace
High Effort
Resort Laps
- Active sliding only counts
- Short rests on lift
- Stick to blue terrain
Downhill
Nordic Tracks
- Steady engine work
- Hills raise the burn
- Classic or skating
Cross-Country
Ski Touring
- Uphill skins = big cost
- Pace by heart rate
- Fuel and hydrate
Backcountry
Energy cost on snow swings wide. A mellow afternoon of alpine runs looks different from a hard hour on Nordic tracks, and both differ from a long climb on skins. The best way to get a reliable range is to start with MET values from the Adult Compendium and then match them to your body weight and time.
Calories Burned While Skiing: Ranges And Real Examples
Researchers publish standardized effort ratings called METs (metabolic equivalents). One MET mirrors resting energy use. An activity with 6 METs costs six times resting energy. The CDC’s intensity page explains the idea in plain terms and provides the “talk test” to gauge effort. Pair those METs with this simple math to estimate your hourly burn:
Calories per hour ≈ MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200 × 60.
Below is a broad table based on Compendium entries for alpine and Nordic styles. It shows the spread for two common body weights. Lift time is excluded because the Compendium entries for downhill specify “active time only.”
Estimated Burn By Style And Intensity
| Style & Intensity (Compendium) | Calories/hr (60 kg) | Calories/hr (80 kg) |
|---|---|---|
| Downhill, light effort (4.3 MET) | ~271 | ~361 |
| Downhill, moderate effort (6.3 MET) | ~397 | ~529 |
| Downhill, vigorous effort (8.0 MET) | ~504 | ~672 |
| Slalom (9.3 MET) | ~586 | ~781 |
| Cross-country, slow 2.5 mph (6.8 MET) | ~428 | ~571 |
| Cross-country, moderate 4–5 mph (8.5 MET) | ~536 | ~714 |
| Cross-country, brisk 5–7.9 mph (11.3 MET) | ~712 | ~949 |
| Cross-country, racing >8 mph (14.0 MET) | ~882 | ~1,176 |
| Cross-country, skating (13.3 MET) | ~838 | ~1,117 |
Once you know your typical pace, you can map a ski day into an energy budget. Many riders like to balance this with their daily calorie intake and hydration plan for clean energy through the afternoon.
Where The Numbers Come From
The Adult Compendium lists METs for a long list of winter activities, including “alpine or snowboarding, light/moderate/vigorous,” “slalom,” and many cross-country speeds and techniques. Those entries anchor the math you see here and let you adjust for body weight. The Harvard Health table also cross-checks real-world burns for 30-minute windows across multiple weights and activities, including both alpine and Nordic sessions.
If you want to sanity-check your intensity on the mountain, the “talk test” from the CDC is handy: talking but not singing suggests moderate effort; only short phrases fit at hard pace. That rule of thumb lines up with the MET scale the Compendium publishes.
What Moves The Needle Most
Effort Level
Downhill style can swing from gentle carving on a wide blue to hard charging on steeps. The Compendium lists 4.3 MET for light resort turns and 8.0 MET for a vigorous rhythm, with slalom sitting near 9.3 MET. That single shift can double the hourly burn at the same body weight.
Technique And Terrain
Nordic classic on flat tracks lands in the mid range. Add sustained climbs or switch to skating technique and the demand climbs fast. Racing speeds and ice-hard climbs push into the teens on the MET scale, which is why Nordic racers can touch four-figure hourly burns.
Body Size
Two riders doing the same run at the same pace won’t burn the same amount. The formula scales linearly with kilograms, so a 60-kg rider doing 6.3-MET laps is near 400 kcal per hour of active sliding, while an 80-kg rider is closer to 530.
Active Time Vs. Total Time
Lift rides, lodge breaks, and line time don’t add to the total. That’s why two hours on the hill might only include 60–80 minutes of active sliding, depending on crowds and chair speed. Keep a rough ratio in mind when you plan snacks.
Temperature And Snow
Sticky spring snow and wind hold speeds down and nudge effort up. Fast winter groomers let you cover more ground at the same heart rate. Neither changes the formula directly, but both shape the pace you can hold.
Turn A Day On Snow Into Real Numbers
Step 1: Pick Your MET
Match your usual pace to the Compendium line. For resort laps, most riders land near 6.3 MET. If you attack runs, use 8.0–9.3. For Nordic, start with 8.5 for moderate tracks and go higher for hilly or skating sessions.
Step 2: Plug In Your Weight
Convert pounds to kilograms (divide by 2.205), then apply the formula. If you prefer a quick check, the Harvard table lists 30-minute burns across weights and sports, which is handy when you don’t want to crunch numbers on your phone.
Step 3: Estimate Active Minutes
Scan your trail map and lift times. A typical hour at a busy resort might include 35–45 minutes of active sliding. Nordic sessions often stay close to full moving time unless you stop to wax or grab water.
Step 4: Plan Fuel And Fluids
Mix steady carbs with some protein and salt for long days. Cold, dry air raises water loss, so carry a bottle even when temps stay low. You’ll ride smoother when energy is stable.
Alpine Vs. Nordic: What To Expect
Resort Runs
Think interval style: a burst of work, then a lift reset. On quieter days you can string together long top-to-bottom laps and lift the average. Hard carving and bumps add cost fast. The slalom entry in the Compendium sits above vigorous resort turns and comes with shorter recovery since runs are dense with turns.
Classic Tracks
Steady engine. Flat tracks feel aerobic and smooth, with METs around 6.8–8.5. Add rolling hills and the number climbs. A race-pace session, even just for intervals, pushes energy demand into the teens on the MET scale.
Skate Technique
Skating shows higher METs than classic at like speeds. The effort maps to large muscle groups with continuous push and glide. If you want a time-efficient workout, a 45-minute skating loop punches above its minutes.
For definitions and intensity cues in plain language, see the CDC MET overview. For cross-checks on per-half-hour burns by weight, the Harvard reference table is a handy companion on trips.
Make Estimates More Personal
Track Heart Rate
Pair a chest strap with your watch. Look for repeatable heart-rate zones on similar terrain. Over time you’ll know that “upper aerobic on blue groomers” means a certain burn per hour of active sliding.
Log Active Minutes
Start a workout when your tips point downhill or when your poles touch the track. Pause at the lift. That habit makes your log match the Compendium assumption of active time only.
Match Food To Effort
Vigorous Nordic intervals and long tours need more carbs per hour than easy resort laps. Plan snacks based on the table at the top and your past logs. A little salt helps on cold, dry days.
What Changes Your Burn The Most
| Factor | Effect Direction | Practical Adjustment |
|---|---|---|
| Effort level | Low → high raises cost steeply | Use shorter, harder bouts or longer steady laps |
| Body weight | Higher weight → higher burn | Use the same MET with your own kilograms |
| Terrain & surface | Uphill & soft snow → higher cost | Pick routes with controlled climbs when pacing |
| Technique | Skate > classic at similar speed | Alternate styles to spread load and keep it fresh |
| Altitude & cold | May reduce pace; shivering adds a small cost | Layer well; keep hands and face protected |
| Active time | Lift rides & lines don’t count | Estimate moving minutes per hour on your hill |
Sample Day Templates
Two Hours Of Resort Laps
Body weight: 70 kg. Intensity: moderate resort turns, 6.3 MET. Active minutes: 80 total. Math: 6.3 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 × 80 ≈ 617 kcal for active sliding. If your hill is quiet and you squeeze in 100 active minutes, the same pace lands near 771 kcal.
One Hour On Classic Tracks
Body weight: 80 kg. Pace: moderate 4–5 mph (8.5 MET). Math: 8.5 × 3.5 × 80 ÷ 200 × 60 ≈ 714 kcal. Add a few hill repeats at brisk effort and the hour can creep toward 900.
Backcountry Tour With Skins
Long climbs with skins push effort beyond typical resort laps. Use the higher Nordic MET entries as a guide for uphill sections, then average with easier downhill time. Pack fuel and water to hold a steady pace.
Safety And Pacing Notes
Warm up before your first long descent, especially in cold air. Check avalanche reports for touring, and carry the standard kit. On resort days, take scheduled breaks to keep hands and feet warm. Skipping refuels leads to sloppy turns and higher risk late in the day.
Frequently Missed Details
Counting Lift Time As Work
It feels like a long day when lines are slow, but only active sliding contributes to the energy math used in the Compendium. Separate “on snow” from “on chair” in your logs and the numbers start to make sense.
Giant Estimates From Fitness Apps
GPS-only trackers can overread when speed varies on steep pitches and during lift segments. Devices that pair speed with heart-rate data tend to match MET-based estimates better.
Pacing All Day At One Speed
A better plan is to mix a few hard laps with lots of relaxed carving. That pattern fits real snow conditions, keeps legs fresh, and smooths your average burn.
Putting It All Together
If your goal is weight control or better stamina for winter trips, map a week that blends resort laps with some Nordic sessions. Mix intensities, adjust food to the plan, and keep logs that separate active sliding from resets. Small tweaks like earlier snacks or a calmer first hour can keep energy steady and make the math repeatable from day to day.
Want a step-by-step walkthrough? Try our calorie deficit guide to pair on-snow days with a clear weekly plan.