How Many Calories Can You Burn Cleaning? | Home Workout Facts

Cleaning can burn roughly 90–240 calories in 30 minutes at 70 kg, with light tidying on the low end and vigorous scrubbing on the high end.

Why Housework Burns Meaningful Energy

Housework stacks lots of movements: walking room to room, bending, carrying supplies, reaching overhead, and steady arm work. Each action nudges heart rate up and recruits large muscle groups. Add a consistent pace, and the energy cost compares to a brisk walk for many tasks. The calorie burn depends on your body weight, intensity, and time on task.

Calorie Burn From Cleaning: Realistic Ranges

The figures below use metabolic equivalents (METs), the standard way researchers estimate energy cost. One MET is resting. A task at 3.5 METs burns 3.5 times resting energy. Using the common formula—kcal/min = MET × 3.5 × body kg ÷ 200—you can estimate any chore for your weight and time.

Estimated Calories For Common Chores (30 Minutes, 70 Kg)

Task MET Calories
Dusting/light tidying 2.5 ~92
Sweeping (general) 3.3 ~121
Sweeping fast, brisk pace 3.8 ~140
Mopping, standing 3.5 ~129
Cleaning windows 3.3 ~121
Vacuuming, moderate effort 3.5 ~129
Bathroom scrubbing, vigorous 6.5 ~239
Carrying boxes/furniture upstairs 9.0 ~331

These ranges come from the Compendium of Physical Activities and match real-world estimates used by clinicians and coaches. Your exact number shifts with pace and breaks. Once you have a sense of your typical session, you can budget around that figure and your daily calorie intake.

How To Personalize Your Estimate

Pick The Chore’s MET

The Compendium lists values for dozens of home tasks. Light dusting sits near 2.5, mopping and vacuuming land near 3.5, and hands-and-knees scrubbing rises to 6.5. Moving heavy items or hauling loads upstairs can spike much higher. The Harvard Health calorie table echoes these ranges with sample burns across three body weights.

Use Your Weight

MET math scales with body mass. The same task at the same pace burns more energy at 90 kg than at 60 kg. That’s why two people doing identical chores can see different totals on their trackers.

Multiply By Time

Short bursts add up. Two 15-minute tidy-ups can match a single half-hour session when the intensity is similar. If you prefer micro-sessions, set a kitchen timer and chip away through the day.

Is Cleaning Moderate Or Vigorous?

Most indoor chores land in the moderate zone; deep scrubbing or stair carries can feel vigorous. If you can talk in short sentences but not sing, that’s the typical moderate cue. Fast breathing that makes full sentences tough points to vigorous work. The CDC intensity guide explains these cues in simple terms and lists examples.

Smart Ways To Raise The Burn Without Feeling Miserable

Set A Pace

Pick a playlist and move from room to room with minimal idle time. Keep tools handy to cut down on pauses.

Stack Movements

While vacuuming a hallway, add two passes per strip. During a bathroom clean, alternate scrubbing with a set of 10 calf raises.

Use Stairs On Purpose

Carry laundry in smaller loads and take the steps instead of saving everything for one heavy trip. Extra trips mean extra work for legs and lungs.

Alternate Muscle Groups

Switch between upper-body tasks (wiping glass) and lower-body tasks (mopping) to keep moving while letting one area rest. This keeps heart rate up without the “burnout” feel.

What About Safety And Strain?

Warm up with two minutes of easy walking at home. Use neutral spine when lifting, keep loads close to the body, and hinge at the hips. If a motion triggers sharp pain, stop and pick a lighter task. Grippy shoes and a dry floor cut slip risk. Rotate hands on repetitive scrubbing to spread the work across arms and shoulders.

Quick Conversions You Can Use

Here are handy ranges for a short clean based on weight and intensity. Pick a column that matches your effort and you’ll get a tight estimate for a 20-minute burst.

20-Minute Clean-Up: Calories By Body Weight

Body Weight Light tidy (3.5 METs) Deep clean (6.5 METs)
60 kg (132 lb) ~74 ~136
75 kg (165 lb) ~92 ~171
90 kg (198 lb) ~110 ~205

How This Compares To A Walk

A brisk walk at 3–4 mph typically sits in the same moderate bucket. A half hour of steady mopping or vacuuming lands in the same ballpark as a half hour of brisk walking for similar body weights. If you’re short on time, a focused kitchen-and-bath session can pull double duty for a cleaner home and a respectable burn.

Factors That Change Your Burn

Body Weight

Heavier bodies spend more energy at a given MET and pace. That’s baked into the equation, not a moral judgment. If you’re tracking trends, compare your own sessions over time rather than to a friend’s total.

Pace And Breaks

Two people can mop for the same duration and end with different results. One person moves continuously with quick turns and efficient strokes. The other stops often to check the phone or answer messages. The first session simply keeps the engine running longer.

Tools And Layout

Upright vacuums and robot helpers change workload. Stairs raise intensity. A compact studio offers fewer steps than a three-story home. Don’t sweat the comparison; just score your own baseline and build from there.

Surface And Friction

Sticky kitchen floors ask more of legs and hips than a quick-glide wood hallway. Soap scum on tile puts shoulders and triceps to work. Harder surfaces bump the MET in practice even if the listed value is a single number.

Temperature And Airflow

Hot rooms feel tougher. A fan or open window can make the same task more comfortable, which often helps you keep a steady pace.

How To Estimate With A Wearable

Modern watches track heart rate and motion, then estimate energy use. Many do fine for relative trends even if the absolute number drifts. To tighten accuracy, update your profile weight, wear the device snugly during chores, and compare a few sessions against MET math. If your watch reads 10–15% higher or lower than the formula, you’ll know how to read it.

Two Worked Examples

Example A: Kitchen And Hallway

Person: 75 kg. Tasks: 10 minutes vacuuming (3.5 METs), 10 minutes mopping (3.5 METs), 10 minutes window wipe (3.3 METs). Estimated burn: (3.5×3.5×75÷200×20) + (3.3×3.5×75÷200×10) ≈ 151 + 43 ≈ 194 kcal.

Example B: Bathroom Deep Clean

Person: 60 kg. Tasks: 20 minutes tub and tile scrub (6.5 METs), 10 minutes fast sweeping (3.8 METs). Estimated burn: (6.5×3.5×60÷200×20) + (3.8×3.5×60÷200×10) ≈ 136 + 40 ≈ 176 kcal.

Sample 30-Minute “Tidy Circuit”

Minute 0–5

Gather tools, clear counters, start a load of laundry, and walk briskly through rooms picking up clutter. Keep steps steady and avoid long pauses.

Minute 5–15

Vacuum high-traffic zones, then wipe mirrors and glass. Aim for smooth, continuous strokes and short transitions between tasks.

Minute 15–25

Mop kitchen or bathroom floors. Finish with a quick sink scrub. Use legs more than back during heavier pushes.

Minute 25–30

Carry trash or recycling downstairs. Do a final pass for stray items and return tools. A calm cooldown walk around the home can bring breathing back down.

Where This Fits Into Weekly Activity

Many adults aim for a blend of cardio and strength across the week. Chores can supply part of that cardio bucket while freeing up time for lifting or mobility work. The CDC’s activity guidance lays out time targets for moderate and vigorous activity; a steady cleaning routine helps you get there on days when a formal workout won’t fit.

What Counts As Progress?

Track time on task two or three days a week. Many people find that 60–90 minutes of moderate home activity across the week pairs well with planned workouts. If you already hit your step goal most days, an extra kitchen and bathroom session can bump weekly energy expenditure without extra gym time.

Want a deeper walkthrough that pairs movement with food? Try our calories and weight loss guide for simple math and portions.