Most riders burn roughly 440–800 calories in a 60-minute spin workout; body weight and intensity set the range.
Low Effort (6 MET)
Spin Class (9 MET)
Hard Push (11 MET)
Basic Pace
- Comfortable cadence
- Light resistance
- Breathing steady
Endurance
Coach-Led Class
- Mixed intervals
- Seated & standing
- Music-paced sets
Mixed Intensity
Power Hour
- High resistance blocks
- Frequent surges
- Short recoveries
Vigorous
Calories Burned During A One-Hour Spin Class: Real Ranges
Energy use in a 60-minute indoor ride scales with two levers: your mass and the effort you hold. Exercise scientists summarize effort with MET values. One MET equals resting metabolism; higher METs mean higher energy cost. The CDC’s intensity page explains the concept and the simple “talk test” to judge effort in real time. Spin-style classes often sit around 9 MET on average with bursts above and dips below, while a relaxed steady hour lands near 6 MET. The Compendium lists both figures for stationary bikes and even breaks them down by watt ranges.
How The Math Works (So You Can Check Your Numbers)
The standard estimate uses this equation: calories per minute = MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200. It comes from the Compendium’s unit conversions and the oxygen-to-calorie relationship used in exercise physiology. You can see the exact conversion spelled out here: Compendium unit conversions.
Once you have calories per minute, multiply by 60 for a 1-hour ride. Example for a 70 kg rider at 9 MET: 9 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 ≈ 1.225 × 9 = 11.0 kcal/min; over 60 minutes that’s about 660 kcal.
One-Hour Indoor Cycling: Sample Burns By Body Weight
The table below uses two common effort levels from the Compendium: a steady 90–100 W hour (6 MET) and a mixed spin-class hour (9 MET). Values are rounded to the nearest 5–10 calories for readability.
| Body Weight (lb) | Steady Hour • 6 MET | Spin Class • 9 MET |
|---|---|---|
| 120 | ~345 kcal | ~515 kcal |
| 150 | ~430 kcal | ~645 kcal |
| 180 | ~515 kcal | ~770 kcal |
| 210 | ~600 kcal | ~900 kcal |
These are clean estimates that line up with the MET listings for stationary bikes. If you track your day as a whole, pairing rides with steps and non-exercise movement, you’ll get a clearer picture of daily calorie burn without chasing guesswork.
Where Do These MET Values Come From?
Researchers maintain a reference called the Adult Compendium of Physical Activities. In the current release, “Bicycling, stationary, 90–100 watts” is listed at 6.0 MET, “RPM/Spin class” at 9.0 MET, and higher wattage tiers step up from 10.3 to 13+ MET as resistance climbs. The full table appears in the 2024 PDF and lets you match what you feel in class to a credible number for calculations.
What Moves The Needle During Your Hour
Average Wattage And Resistance
More torque on the flywheel raises oxygen demand. If your bike shows watts, you can match your typical block to a Compendium line: 151–199 W maps to ~10.3 MET; 200–229 W to ~10.8 MET; 230–250 W to ~12.5 MET.
Body Weight
Heavier riders burn more per minute at the same MET because moving larger mass takes more energy. That’s why the tables scale by kilograms in the equation.
Cadence And Standing Bouts
Fast cadence with low resistance may feel busy but won’t move energy use much. Standing climbs and sprints raise the average, especially when recoveries stay short.
Fitness Level
Fitter riders can hold tough blocks longer, so the hour averages higher. New riders may sit closer to 6–7 MET for most of the ride until legs and lungs adapt.
Heat, Hydration, And Bike Fit
Hot rooms and poor airflow stress the body and push heart rate up. Proper saddle height and reach keep hips stable so you can drive power without wasted motion.
Quick Way To Personalize Your Estimate
Step 1 — Pick Your Effort Band
Use the talk test: at moderate effort you can talk but can’t sing; at hard effort you can say only a few words between breaths. That maps well to 6–9 MET for most indoor sessions.
Step 2 — Do The Equation
Convert weight to kilograms (pounds ÷ 2.2046). Then run: calories per minute = MET × 3.5 × kg ÷ 200. Multiply by 60 for an hour. Keep it simple by saving the 1-line formula in your phone notes.
Step 3 — Sanity-Check With Your Bike’s Display
Some studio bikes estimate calories using proprietary math. If your readout is way above the MET estimate while average watts look modest, the display may be generous. Use MET math for a grounded baseline and treat the console as a motivator, not the scoreboard.
Worked Examples You Can Copy
Example A — New Rider Holding A Relaxed Hour
Body weight 68 kg (150 lb). Effort 6 MET. Calories per minute ≈ 6 × 3.5 × 68 ÷ 200 = 7.14 kcal/min. Over 60 minutes, that’s ~430 kcal.
Example B — Coach-Led Session With Mixed Intervals
Body weight 81.6 kg (180 lb). Average effort near 9 MET after highs and lows. Calories per minute ≈ 9 × 3.5 × 81.6 ÷ 200 = 12.86 kcal/min. Over 60 minutes, that’s ~770 kcal.
Example C — Strong Rider Pushing Heavy Resistance
Body weight 70 kg (154 lb). Long blocks around 11 MET. Calories per minute ≈ 11 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 = 13.48 kcal/min. Over 60 minutes, that’s ~810 kcal.
How Spin Compares To Other Popular Sessions
These reference points help frame your hour on the bike against other gym mainstays for a 70 kg rider. Numbers come from the Compendium listings for each mode.
| What You’re Doing | MET | Calories/Hour |
|---|---|---|
| Stationary 90–100 W (steady) | 6.0 | ~441 kcal |
| Spin/RPM-style class | 9.0 | ~661 kcal |
| Stationary 151–199 W | 10.3 | ~757 kcal |
| Stationary 200–229 W | 10.8 | ~793 kcal |
| Stationary 230–250 W | 12.5 | ~919 kcal |
Practical Ways To Raise Or Lower The Burn
To Nudge Calories Up
- Use longer climbs with smooth standing segments.
- Shorten recoveries by 10–15 seconds in each block.
- Aim for a slightly higher average watt target across the hour.
To Keep It Manageable
- Hold seated endurance pace for most of the class.
- Pick a resistance you can maintain with clean form.
- Take full recoveries between surges when the coach offers them.
Fuel, Fluids, And Recovery For A Solid Hour
Before You Clip In
A small carb snack 30–60 minutes before class keeps effort stable. Think fruit, toast with honey, or a handful of pretzels. Bring a bottle and a towel if the studio runs warm.
During The Ride
Sip water every 10–15 minutes. If you’re stacking classes or going long, a sports drink can help you hold power in later blocks.
After Class
Protein plus carbs helps your legs bounce back. Stretch hip flexors and quads while the muscles are still warm, then walk a few minutes to bring heart rate down.
Safety And Effort Checks
Spin sessions are vigorous for many people. If you can speak only a few words at a time, you’re likely at the high end of intensity, which matches the CDC’s “vigorous” cue on the talk test. If you’re brand new or returning after time off, slide the resistance down and build week by week.
Sources Used For The Numbers
The MET definitions and talk-test cues are explained by the CDC’s intensity page. The specific stationary cycling MET values (including watts and spin class) come from the 2024 Adult Compendium. Those two references are reliable, public, and kept current by the organizations that publish them.
Build Smarter Around Your Class Habit
If fat loss is the goal, pair two or three spin hours with strength work and a slight energy gap. For a friendly, step-by-step walkthrough, try our calorie deficit guide.