How Many Calories Can You Burn Trampolining? | Real Numbers

Trampolining typically burns 6–10 calories per minute for adults; body weight, bounce height, and routine decide the total.

Calories Burned On A Trampoline: Real-World Ranges

Two reliable anchors set the range. First, the Compendium lists “trampoline, recreational” at 6.3 MET, and “trampoline, competitive” at 10.3 MET; those map cleanly to moderate through vigorous effort. Second, an American Council on Exercise project measured about 9–12 calories per minute in a choreographed mini-trampoline routine with college-aged adults, which lands in the vigorous window when the choreography ramps up. Both lines point to a realistic span of roughly 6–10 calories per minute for most adults during casual sessions and more when intensity spikes.

How The Math Works

The standard relationship converts MET to energy: calories per minute = MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200. That places a 70 kg adult at ~7.7 kcal/min during a 6.3 MET bounce, and ~12.6 kcal/min during a 10.3 MET athletic routine. The result scales linearly with weight and with time.

Early Estimates Table (Fast Reference)

This quick table blends MET values with a common body weight to give you a usable yardstick in seconds.

Style & Effort MET Reference Calories / 30 min @ 70 kg
Gentle Bounce, steady rhythm ~4.0 MET (light) ~147 kcal
Recreational Pace, varied moves 6.3 MET (Compendium) ~231 kcal
Sport-Style Combo, high knees, sprints 10.3 MET (Compendium) ~378 kcal

Why Your Number Shifts

Three levers move the needle the most: how much you weigh, how high and fast you bounce, and whether your routine strings together tougher drills like tuck jumps or sprint-style jogging on the mat. Short rests lower the average. Longer, punchy intervals raise it.

Where METs Come From

Researchers catalogue thousands of activities with standardized intensity tags. “Trampoline, recreational” and “trampoline, competitive” sit in the sports list with their MET values so coaches and health pros can estimate energy expended and compare sessions across sports. The CDC explains METs as a multiple of resting effort, and that framing lines up with how most exercise labs convert oxygen use to calories during testing.

From Mini-Rebounders To Backyard Frames

Small rebounders favor quick, controlled bounces and on-the-spot jogging. Backyard frames add space for longer airtime and playful drills. Either path can hit moderate intensity fast. A coached routine on a rebounder often edges into vigorous territory, which also matches lab findings from an ACE-sponsored session using a structured video workout (ACE research summary).

Set A Personal Baseline

Your daily burn comes from two pieces: resting energy and activity on top of it. If you understand calories burned while resting, you’ll see how a few focused bounce blocks can meaningfully move the daily total without marathon sessions.

Build A 30-Minute Bounce That Actually Burns

Here’s a simple structure that balances fun with reliable energy output. Use songs as timers and keep rests brief.

Warm-Up (5 minutes)

  • Soft bounces with an easy arm swing
  • Marches and heel digs on the mat
  • Side steps with gentle shoulder rolls

Work Blocks (20 minutes)

Alternate two-minute efforts with 30-second breathers. Cycle these five moves twice:

  1. Mat jog with high knees
  2. Wide-narrow jumps
  3. Front-back hops
  4. Twist jumps
  5. Fast step-touch with punches

Cool-Down (5 minutes)

  • Slow bounces to drop the heart rate
  • Calf, hamstring, and hip flexor stretches

How To Estimate Your Exact Burn

Grab your weight in kilograms, pick the MET that matches your pace, and plug into the formula. Two examples show the swing clearly.

Example 1: Casual Session

Weight: 60 kg. Intensity: 6.3 MET. Math: 6.3 × 3.5 × 60 ÷ 200 ≈ 6.6 kcal/min. Time: 25 min. Total ≈ 165 kcal.

Example 2: Push Day

Weight: 80 kg. Intensity: 10.3 MET. Math: 10.3 × 3.5 × 80 ÷ 200 ≈ 14.4 kcal/min. Time: 20 min of work inside a 30-minute session. Work-block total ≈ 288 kcal.

Technique Tweaks That Raise The Number

Add Arms

Pumping overhead or throwing quick jabs while you bounce nudges heart rate and increases oxygen use.

Use Intervals

Alternate one song at a steady clip with 45–60 seconds of sprint-style bouncing on the chorus. Short, sharp bursts drive the average up.

Go Multi-Direction

Front-back, side-to-side, and twist patterns recruit more muscle. That makes the same minute work harder for you.

Safety And Smart Progression

Pick a mat with a stable frame. Clear overhead space. Start with small ranges and grow amplitude as control improves. The CDC’s “talk test” is a handy guide: if you can talk but not sing, you’re in the moderate zone; if you can only say a few words, you’re in vigorous territory (CDC intensity basics).

Calories By Body Weight (Recreational Pace)

These numbers use 6.3 MET, a steady recreational bounce. Adjust minutes up or down to match your session.

Body Weight Calories / 30 min @ 6.3 MET
50 kg (110 lb) ~165 kcal
60 kg (132 lb) ~198 kcal
70 kg (154 lb) ~231 kcal
80 kg (176 lb) ~264 kcal
90 kg (198 lb) ~297 kcal

Mini-Trampoline vs. Big Backyard Frame

Rebounder Benefits

Lower ceiling clearance, quieter springs or cords, and simple storage make it easy to build a daily habit. Routines are repeatable, which helps you track progress across weeks.

Backyard Advantages

More surface area invites higher jumps and longer moves. A safe enclosure helps when you start mixing in twists or brief sprints across the mat.

How This Compares To Other Cardio

Lab-measured mini-trampoline sessions land in a range comparable to steady running or faster cycling when the choreography turns vigorous, yet many participants rate the effort as easier while hitting the same objective intensity (ACE study PDF).

Make It Work For Weight Goals

Weight change tracks the balance between intake and expenditure across days. Pair consistent bounce blocks with balanced meals and a sensible weekly target. If you also walk more or add a short strength routine, your daily total climbs with little extra planning. For deeper planning, you might like a gentle read on the calorie deficit guide.