A 30-minute bench session burns about 120–210 calories for a 70 kg lifter, with hard sets pushing the higher end.
Low Effort
Mixed Effort
Hard Effort
Basic Technique
- Light sets, longer rests
- Focus on bar path
- Accessory work is brief
Lower burn
Volume Builder
- 8–12 reps per set
- 90–120 s rests
- Push/pull pairing
Moderate burn
Power/Speed
- Heavy singles or clusters
- Short rests or EMOM
- Dense session plan
Higher burn
Bench Press Calorie Burn Formula (Simple And Accurate)
Energy use during pressing tracks three levers: your body weight, session duration, and how hard you work. The most used method applies MET values, which scale energy cost relative to resting. Use this: kcal per minute = MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200. Pick 3.5 METs for a general lifting pace and 6.0 METs for vigorous, dense sets.
| Body Weight | Moderate (3.5 METs) | Hard (6.0 METs) |
|---|---|---|
| 120 lb (54.4 kg) | 100 kcal | 171 kcal |
| 140 lb (63.5 kg) | 117 kcal | 200 kcal |
| 160 lb (72.6 kg) | 133 kcal | 229 kcal |
| 180 lb (81.6 kg) | 150 kcal | 257 kcal |
| 200 lb (90.7 kg) | 167 kcal | 286 kcal |
These figures assume a normal bench day where sets and rests fill the full half hour. If you press for performance or physique, snacks and recovery land better once you set your daily calorie needs.
How Many Calories Are Burned While Bench Pressing Per Set?
Most lifters care about the energy cost of the work, not the time spent tying plates. A simple way to zoom in is to count only “bar-in-hands” minutes. If your working time totals 8 minutes in a session, multiply the per-minute value by 8 and you’ll get a tighter estimate than the session-timer view.
Choose A MET That Matches The Day
For a slower pace with longer rests and a technique focus, 3.5 METs fits. For dense clusters, short rests, or near-max work, 6.0 METs is the better pick. The Compendium of Physical Activities lists resistance training entries at both ends, so you can pick the one that mirrors your plan.
Working Time Beats Clock Time
Let’s say you weigh 70 kg. At 6.0 METs the math is ~7.4 kcal per minute; at 3.5 METs it’s ~4.3 kcal per minute. Ten crisp singles at 20–25 seconds each adds up to ~3.5–4 minutes under the bar. That’s ~26–30 kcal of direct pressing work at the higher setting, with more coming from setup, unracking, and light accessories.
What Rest Length Does To The Number
Long rests stretch the session without raising energy use much. Short rests raise session density, which bumps the per-minute burn. Programming guides from ACSM outline rest ranges by goal; aligning rest to intent keeps the estimate honest and the training crisp.
Scenario Math You Can Copy
Use the ready-made cases below as templates. Swap your body weight and minutes, and you’ll be within a small margin of a lab-grade estimate.
Case A — Classic 5×5 Day
Body weight 80 kg; 5 sets of 5 around 75% 1RM; 3-minute rests; total time 30 minutes. Using 3.5 METs gives ~147 kcal for the session. Push the pace to a denser style and the 6.0 MET track gives ~252 kcal.
Case B — Volume Wave
Body weight 60 kg; 4×8 around 70% 1RM; 90-second rests; total time 25 minutes. Using the 6.0 MET track: ~158 kcal. Moving to a calmer day at 3.5 METs puts it near ~92 kcal.
Case C — Singles Practice
Body weight 90 kg; 8 singles at ~85% 1RM; 2-minute rests; total time 20 minutes with four short accessory sets. Using the 6.0 MET track, expect ~190–200 kcal for the full block.
Bench Press Energy Use Versus Other Work
Pressing is mostly upper-body with pauses between bouts, so the burn sits under big circuits and full-body conditioning. That’s normal. A mixed push day with rows, triceps work, and machine presses will land higher because more muscle joins the party and the clock stays busy.
| Plan Type | Work:Rest Pattern | Est. kcal / 30 min |
|---|---|---|
| Technique Focus | Short sets • 2–3 min rests | ~120–140 |
| Moderate Volume | 8–12 reps • 90–120 s | ~170–200 |
| High Density | Clusters/supersets • ≤90 s | ~200–220 |
How To Make Your Estimate More Precise
Weigh Yourself In Kilograms
Most formulas use kilograms. Divide pounds by 2.2 to convert. Then apply the MET track that matches how you train that day.
Time Your Sets
Sum the seconds where you actually press. Add 10–15% to account for setup, unracking, and bar control. Multiply by the kcal-per-minute number for your MET track.
Pick A Consistent Pace
Keep rest lengths inside a narrow range for the whole block. Session density is a big swing factor in the math.
Don’t Bank On “Afterburn”
Post-exercise burn exists but it’s small for most strength sessions. Treat it as a bonus, not your baseline plan.
Programming Levers That Nudge The Number
Load And Reps
Heavier sets raise effort per minute but usually lengthen rests. Higher reps push breathing and time under tension. Both roads can lift session energy cost; the clock decides how much.
Grip, Touch, And Tempo
Wide grips and longer pauses raise cost per rep for many lifters because the bar path and stability demands grow. Slow eccentrics stack extra seconds under load.
Accessory Choices
Close-grips, dips, and push-ups slot in well if you want more total burn without drifting away from the main lift.
Trusted References For The Numbers
MET values for resistance training come from the research-backed listings in the Compendium of Physical Activities (3.5 for general lifting, 6.0 for vigorous work). For rest ranges and set structures that shape session density, see ACSM’s current pronouncements, available under ACSM Position Stands.
What This Means For Fat Loss And Fueling
Press days don’t torch energy like hill sprints. That’s fine. They drive strength and muscle, which supports long-term energy use. Match snacks and carbs to the training day, and keep your weekly plan anchored to a realistic intake target. For cutting phases, a small steady deficit paired with steady lifting wins far more often than chases for giant session burns.
Want more structure for the nutrition side? A short nudge: try our calorie deficit guide.