At a moderate pace, a 10-mile walk in 3 hours typically burns 600–1,150 calories depending on body weight and terrain.
Risk
Intensity
Calorie Burn
Easy Route
- Flat path, shade where possible
- Comfort shoes, light pack
- Snack once each hour
Baseline
Rolling Course
- Small hills or wind
- Shorter stride on climbs
- Fuel every 45–60 min
Extra Effort
Fast Pace
- Brisk 3.6–3.9 mph
- Arm drive + cadence
- Extra fluids + sodium
Higher Burn
Calories Burned On A 10-Mile Walk In Three Hours (With Math)
Covering 10 miles in three hours works out to an average speed of about 3.3 miles per hour. At that pace on level ground, the Compendium of Physical Activities lists a metabolic equivalent (MET) of 3.8 for “walking, 2.8–3.4 mph, level, moderate pace.” That MET value lets us estimate energy burn with a simple formula: calories ≈ MET × body weight (kg) × time (hours).
Plug in the numbers for a three-hour outing at MET 3.8 and you get a handy shortcut: calories ≈ 11.4 × body weight in kilograms. That multiplier makes quick work of planning snacks, hydration, and recovery. The table below shows common body weights and the expected burn for a flat route at this pace.
Broad Burn Estimates By Body Weight (3 Hours, Flat, 3.3 mph)
| Body Weight (lb) | Body Weight (kg) | Estimated Calories |
|---|---|---|
| 120 | 54.4 | ~620 |
| 130 | 59.0 | ~672 |
| 140 | 63.5 | ~724 |
| 150 | 68.0 | ~775 |
| 160 | 72.6 | ~828 |
| 170 | 77.1 | ~879 |
| 180 | 81.6 | ~931 |
| 190 | 86.2 | ~984 |
| 200 | 90.7 | ~1,035 |
| 210 | 95.3 | ~1,087 |
| 220 | 99.8 | ~1,139 |
Distance tracking keeps the math honest. If your route isn’t measured, use a GPS watch or just track your steps and map the path later. Small detours and elevation changes can nudge the final burn up or down.
Why The Estimate Works (And What Can Skew It)
MET values translate movement into energy cost. One MET equals about 1 kcal per kilogram per hour of rest. Walking in the 3.0–3.4 mph band sits in the middle of the moderate zone, which matches the “talk test” experience: you should be able to speak in sentences, but singing would feel hard. The CDC lists “walking briskly (2.5 mph or faster)” under moderate effort, so this pace fits that bracket.
Three factors swing the number most: body weight, pace, and terrain. Body weight has a linear effect in the equation. Speed and hills shift the MET rating. On the same route, wind, surface softness, and pack weight also raise the demand. That’s why two people on the same walk can finish with different calorie totals even when time and distance match.
Picking The Right MET For Your Route
The Compendium gives a range that maps well to real-world walking. For level ground at 2.8–3.4 mph, the MET is 3.8. For 3.5–3.9 mph on the flat, the MET rises to 4.8. Gentle climbs and trail surfaces add more. If you push the pace closer to the brisk band, expect a bump of roughly 25–30% in the hourly burn. That can stack up over three hours.
What Counts As “Moderate” Effort
A simple check keeps intensity where you want it: you should carry on a conversation. If sentences turn into single words, you’ve likely drifted into vigorous territory. That shift is useful when you want a higher burn, but it also changes fueling and hydration needs.
Step-By-Step: Do Your Own Calculation
1) Convert Body Weight To Kilograms
Divide pounds by 2.2. A 180-lb walker weighs about 81.6 kg.
2) Pick A MET That Matches The Pace
Use 3.8 for 2.8–3.4 mph on level ground; use 4.8 for 3.5–3.9 mph on the flat. For rolling terrain, choose the higher value or add a small buffer.
3) Multiply: MET × kg × Hours
At 180 lb (81.6 kg), level route, 3 hours at MET 3.8 → 3.8 × 81.6 × 3 ≈ 931 kcal. Nudge up if your pace is closer to 3.6–3.9 mph or your route includes steady climbs.
Pace And Terrain Scenarios
Here are common ways a three-hour, ten-mile walk shifts energy burn. The baseline uses MET 3.8. Brisk, flat walking uses MET 4.8. Moderate rolling hills often land between those two, while steeper grades can go beyond brisk walking’s cost even without a speed change.
Scenario-Based Estimates (70 kg / 154 lb Reference)
| Scenario | MET | 3-Hour Calories |
|---|---|---|
| Level path, ~3.3 mph | 3.8 | ~800 |
| Brisk, flat, 3.6–3.9 mph | 4.8 | ~1,010 |
| Rolling hills, steady effort | 4.2–4.6 | ~880–960 |
| With stroller or light pack | 3.8–4.5 | ~800–940 |
| Hot day, soft trail | 4.2–4.8 | ~880–1,010 |
Fuel, Fluids, And Comfort
Hydration Plan
Most walkers do well sipping 300–600 ml each hour. Warmer days or higher sweat rates can double that. Electrolyte tabs or a pinch of salt in one bottle cut the risk of cramps on routes with long climbs. Drink to thirst, but don’t leave the start under-hydrated.
Smart Snacks
Three hours of steady walking doesn’t require heavy fueling, yet a small snack each hour keeps energy even. Think fruit, pretzels, or a simple bar. If your burn sits near 900–1,000 kcal, two light snacks and a carb-rich meal afterward fit the day without feeling stuffed.
Footcare That Saves The Day
Comfortable shoes, a thin moisture-wicking sock, and a dab of anti-chafe on hot spots prevent blisters. Lace snug through the midfoot and looser over the toes. A quick re-tie at mile five often pays off late.
Pacing Tips For A Smooth Three Hours
Settle Early
Start with a relaxed first mile. Let breathing and cadence stabilize before leaning into a brisker rhythm. A steady start keeps heart rate in the moderate band and keeps the final miles from dragging.
Use Short Strides On Hills
Short steps raise cadence without spiking effort. Keep your eyes about 10–15 feet ahead. That simple shift improves posture and reduces ankle roll risk on uneven ground.
Breaks That Don’t Break Flow
Two brief stops to refill water or adjust layers won’t dent total burn. They often help you hold pace over the final third of the route.
When You Want A Higher Burn
Add Gentle Speed
Move toward the brisk band. The MET jumps from 3.8 to 4.8 on the flat once pace approaches 3.5–3.9 mph. Over three hours, that’s roughly 25% more energy for the same distance.
Pick A Rolling Course
Small climbs spread across the route make a noticeable difference while staying friendly on joints. Keep strides short on ups and protect the knees on downs.
Carry Just Enough
Water, a wind layer, and a small snack are plenty for most city routes. On long greenway stretches, stash an extra bottle at the midpoint or plan a fountain stop.
Safety And Effort Checks
Use The Talk Test
Speech in sentences means moderate. Short phrases mean you’ve likely tipped into vigorous. Dial back if you’re after an even three-hour effort.
Heat And Sun
Midday routes raise the perceived effort and the fluid needs. Aim for shade, pick light colors, and swap to breathable socks.
Post-Walk Recovery
Rehydrate, eat a carb-plus-protein meal within an hour, and walk five relaxed minutes around the block later in the day. That cool-down clears stiffness and sets up tomorrow’s training.
Trusted References For The Numbers
The MET ratings in this guide reflect the Compendium of Physical Activities entries for level walking speeds. And to align effort with health guidance, “walking briskly” is listed by the CDC as moderate aerobic activity under its intensity basics page, which helps you set pacing with the talk test.
Bring It All Together
Use the 11.4×kg shortcut for a level, three-hour trek. Bump the estimate when pace edges into the brisk band or when your route climbs. Small planning moves—route choice, steady fueling, and shoe comfort—make the miles feel smooth and keep energy stable from first step to last.
Want a deeper walkthrough of weight-loss math and planning? Try our calorie deficit guide next.