For a 60-minute house clean, a 60-kg person typically burns ~150–380 calories, depending on the mix of chores and pace.
Light Chores
General Clean
Vigorous Tasks
Basic Tidy
- 20 min dust & dishes
- 10 min light sweep
- Optional 5 min pickup
Low effort
Room Reset
- 15 min vacuum or mop
- 10 min windows & counters
- 5 min linen change
Moderate
Deep Clean
- 15 min bathroom scrub
- 15 min kitchen detail
- 10 min box carry
High burn
Calories Burned From House Cleaning: Realistic Ranges
Short answer math helps you set expectations. Light tidying lands near the lower end, while a focused bathroom scrub or a fast mop set pushes the upper end. The spread comes from MET values (a standard measure of activity intensity), your weight, and how steady you move.
Think in blocks. A steady 30 minutes of general chores for a 70-kg person often falls around 120–140 calories. Double the time, and you roughly double the burn. Swap in tougher tasks, and the number climbs.
How The Math Works
Energy use during activity is commonly estimated with a MET equation: calories per minute = MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200. Multiply by minutes to get a session total. METs come from lab and field studies and assign typical values to tasks like vacuuming or scrubbing.
That formula scales linearly. Heavier bodies burn more per minute at the same pace. Longer sessions add up minute by minute. A jump from 3.0 to 5.0 MET tasks bumps burn by about two-thirds at the same body weight.
Task-By-Task Numbers (Based On Standard METs)
Use this broad table to map chores to rough hourly burn for a 60-kg person. Your total changes with weight, pace, and breaks.
| Task | METs | ~kcal/hour |
|---|---|---|
| Dusting, Polishing Furniture | 2.5 | 158 |
| Washing Dishes (standing) | 2.0 | 126 |
| Sweeping, General (indoors) | 3.3 | 208 |
| Vacuuming, General | 3.0 | 189 |
| Mopping, Moderate Effort | 3.5 | 221 |
| Windows, General | 3.3 | 208 |
| Kitchen Activity, Moderate | 3.3–3.5 | 208–221 |
| Making Bed, Changing Linens | 3.0 | 189 |
| Laundry, Moderate | 4.0 | 252 |
| Scrubbing Floors, Moderate | 3.5 | 221 |
| Scrubbing Floors, Vigorous | 6.5 | 411 |
| Organizing A Room | 4.8 | 303 |
| Carrying Groceries (level) | 3.5 | 221 |
| Carrying Groceries Upstairs | 5.3 | 335 |
| Moving Furniture/Boxes | 5.8 | 365 |
| Moving Items Upstairs | 9.0 | 567 |
Once you see the spread, building a cleaning plan gets easier. Start with general rooms at mid-intensity, then add one high-MET block for a boost. That mix often beats a long, slow tidy for total burn.
Before you chase numbers, set a baseline for calories burned every day. It helps you weigh housework against walks, strength sessions, and other movement you already log.
What Changes The Burn Most
Body Weight
The equation multiplies by kilograms, so a 90-kg person burns half again as much as a 60-kg person during the same task and time. That’s why charts always show ranges.
Task Choice And Pace
Vacuuming and mopping sit in the middle. Bathroom and floor scrubs jump higher. Carrying loads upstairs spikes the number. Pick at least one “hard” block in a session if you want a noticeable bump.
Breaks And Pauses
Energy use stacks minute by minute. Long pauses drop the total. Cluster tasks so you can keep moving for 10–15 minutes, then take a short drink break, then repeat.
Tools And Setup
A lightweight cordless vacuum lets you move faster and sustain the pace. A caddy with supplies trims idle time. Even small logistics tweaks can push you into steadier work.
Plan A 30-Minute Session (Sample Routines)
Balanced Clean (Mid Burn)
10 min vacuum or mop, 10 min windows and counters, 10 min linens and pickup. If you keep tempo brisk, that’s near the mid-range for a 70-kg person.
High-Burn Burst
12 min bathroom scrub, 8 min fast sweep, 10 min carry bins or boxes to storage. Expect numbers closer to the upper band, especially if stairs are involved.
Gentle Reset
15 min dishes and sink area, 10 min light dust, 5 min tidy. Useful for active rest days when you want to move without pushing hard.
Turn A Clean Into Cardio
Set A Tempo
Pick a playlist with an upbeat pace. Move steadily rather than sprinting then stalling. A metronome-style rhythm keeps METs in a solid zone.
Stack Movements
Combine lower-body work with each reach. Think split stance while wiping counters, calf raises while you wait for spray to work, or suitcase carries with laundry baskets.
Use The Room Order
Work from top to bottom and left to right so you avoid backtracking. Less stopping means more minutes at the target intensity.
Is Cleaning “Enough” For Weekly Activity Targets?
Many chores fall in the moderate range for effort. That helps you inch toward weekly movement targets alongside walks or cycling. To gauge effort level, match breathing and talking cues to the CDC’s intensity guidance. If you can talk but not sing, you’re in a moderate zone; if you can speak only a few words, you’re near vigorous.
| Body Weight | ~kcal @ 3.5 MET | ~kcal @ 5.0 MET |
|---|---|---|
| 50 kg | 92 | 132 |
| 60 kg | 110 | 158 |
| 70 kg | 129 | 184 |
| 80 kg | 147 | 210 |
| 90 kg | 165 | 236 |
Build A Weekly Mix That Works
Housework is movement you’re already doing, so it’s smart to count it. Pair mid-intensity chores with dedicated walks or rides to reach weekly targets. You can treat heavy blocks like bathroom scrubs or box carries as mini intervals inside a longer tidy.
If you prefer a numeric goal, aim for a few hours of moderate movement across the week and at least two short strength sessions. That blend supports general health while you keep the home in shape.
Safety, Form, And Recovery
Back-Friendly Moves
Hinge at the hips when lifting bins. Keep loads close. Split heavy trips into smaller ones if stairs are steep or you feel strain.
Grip And Shoulders
Switch hands during scrubs and wipes. Alternate leading foot while mopping so you don’t twist the same way over and over.
Hydration And Air
Dry indoor air and cleaners can make you breathe harder than expected. Crack a window, sip water between rooms, and pace the job to how you feel that day.
Method And Sources
Values in the first table come from standard MET listings for home tasks. Calorie estimates apply the MET equation shown earlier and round to the nearest whole number for readability. Real-world totals vary with pauses, tool weight, floor type, and your movement efficiency.
Want a plan that connects daily movement to weight goals? Try our calorie deficit guide for a simple way to tie chores, steps, and meals into one picture.