Water walking expends ~2.5–6.8 METs, equal to about 150–540 calories per hour for adults weighing 60–90 kg.
Light Effort
Moderate Pace
Brisk Pace
Shallow Basics
- Ankles to knees
- Slow steps, relaxed arms
- Focus on posture
Low impact
Waist-Deep Routine
- Arms sweep the water
- Steady breathing
- Optional water shoes
Balanced burn
Chest-Deep Push
- Longer stride, faster rate
- Use hand buoys or gloves
- Short intervals
Higher resistance
How Calorie Burn Works In The Pool
Water adds drag to every move. Energy use scales with that drag, your pace, your range of motion, and your body weight. One handy way to estimate energy use is the MET system. A MET is a multiple of resting energy; a light pool stroll sits near 2.5 METs, a steady pace lands around 4.5, and a fast push reaches ~6.8. The CDC explains METs and simple “talk test” intensity cues clearly in its primer on measuring activity intensity.
The Simple Equation You Can Use Anywhere
Use this short equation to estimate energy use from a pool session:
Calories ≈ MET × body weight (kg) × time (hours).
Example: a 70 kg adult at a steady pace (4.5 METs) for 30 minutes: 4.5 × 70 × 0.5 ≈ 158 calories. The same person at a brisk pace (6.8 METs) for 45 minutes: 6.8 × 70 × 0.75 ≈ 357 calories. The MET values for light, moderate, and brisk water walking come from the Compendium of Physical Activities.
Calories By Body Weight (Moderate Pace)
This table shows estimates for a steady pool pace at ~4.5 METs (waist- to chest-deep). Pick the row close to your weight and match the session length.
| Body Weight | 30 Minutes (4.5 METs) | 60 Minutes (4.5 METs) |
|---|---|---|
| 50 kg (110 lb) | 113 kcal | 225 kcal |
| 55 kg (121 lb) | 124 kcal | 248 kcal |
| 60 kg (132 lb) | 135 kcal | 270 kcal |
| 65 kg (143 lb) | 146 kcal | 293 kcal |
| 70 kg (154 lb) | 158 kcal | 315 kcal |
| 75 kg (165 lb) | 169 kcal | 338 kcal |
| 80 kg (176 lb) | 180 kcal | 360 kcal |
| 85 kg (187 lb) | 191 kcal | 383 kcal |
| 90 kg (198 lb) | 203 kcal | 405 kcal |
| 100 kg (220 lb) | 225 kcal | 450 kcal |
| 110 kg (243 lb) | 248 kcal | 495 kcal |
| 120 kg (265 lb) | 270 kcal | 540 kcal |
Tracking sessions pays off fast once you start logging distance and steps in the pool—many swimmers use waterproof counters or a simple tally; you can also apply a land routine and adapt it with how to track your steps to keep weekly totals tidy.
What Changes The Burn In Water
Three levers drive the number on your log: intensity, depth, and equipment. Push any of them and the water pushes back. Here’s how each one shifts energy use.
Intensity: From Stroll To Strong Push
Intensity is the biggest driver. The Compendium lists light pool steps at ~2.5 METs, a steady pace near 4.5 METs, and a brisk drive at ~6.8 METs. That spread turns a 30-minute block at 70 kg from ~88 kcal up to ~238 kcal. Values are drawn from the water activities section that also includes jogging in place (~9.8 METs) and water aerobics (~5.5 METs).
Depth: Ankle-High Vs Chest-Deep
The higher the water line, the bigger the drag. Shallow work feels easy and fits beginners or recovery days. Waist- to chest-deep ramps the load without pounding the joints. You’ll feel the difference on every arm sweep and knee drive.
Equipment: Add Resistance Wisely
Hand buoys, webbed gloves, and foam dumbbells add surface area. Water shoes help grip the pool floor so you can extend your stride. A buoyancy belt lets you move in deeper lanes without bouncing. Small tools, big returns—just keep form clean and shoulder-friendly.
Build A Session You’ll Stick With
Good sessions are simple. Start with a warm-up, set a work block, then cool down. Use a timer or pool clock so pacing stays honest.
Warm-Up (5–10 Minutes)
- Easy steps in shallow water
- Gentle arm sweeps side to side
- Two short pick-ups to wake up your stride
Main Block (15–30 Minutes)
- Steady set: 10–20 minutes at a pace where you can talk in brief phrases
- Intervals: 2 minutes brisk, 2 minutes easy; repeat 4–6 times
- Mixers: Side steps, backward walk, high-knee march
Cool-Down (5–10 Minutes)
- Easy steps, slower arm movements
- Big shoulder circles and calf loosening
- Light stretch on deck if you like
How To Estimate Your Own Numbers
Here’s a fast path to a personal estimate using the MET approach and a body weight you actually know. The CDC gives simple talk-test cues to pick your intensity level, which matches the METs below for pool steps.
Step 1 — Pick Your Weight
Convert pounds to kilograms by dividing by 2.205. A 176 lb adult is ~80 kg.
Step 2 — Choose The Pace
- Easy pool stroll: ~2.5 METs
- Steady pace: ~4.5 METs
- Brisk push: ~6.8 METs
These values are listed under water activities (codes 18367–18369) in the Compendium table.
Step 3 — Do The Math
Calories per minute ≈ MET × weight(kg) ÷ 60. Multiply by your minutes in the pool.
Worked Example
Weight: 80 kg; Time: 40 minutes; Pace: steady 4.5 METs → 4.5 × 80 ÷ 60 × 40 ≈ 240 calories.
Depth And Pace Cheatsheet
Use this quick view to spot the shift from shallow to deeper work. MET values and per-hour estimates assume a 70 kg adult.
| Style | MET Estimate | Calories/Hour (70 kg) |
|---|---|---|
| Shallow stroll | ~2.5 | ≈175 kcal |
| Waist-deep steady | ~4.5 | ≈315 kcal |
| Chest-deep brisk | ~6.8 | ≈476 kcal |
| Jog in place | ~9.8 | ≈686 kcal |
| Water aerobics set | ~5.5 | ≈385 kcal |
Values above align with the activity codes in the Compendium’s water section and give a practical range most pool walkers will see.
Form Tips That Raise Results
Posture And Stride
Stand tall, ribs stacked over hips, eyes forward. Drive the foot through the water and finish each step. Short, choppy steps waste effort; long, clean steps deliver smoother resistance and steadier breathing.
Arms Set The Pace
Sweep from shoulder to hip with palms slightly turned. Keep elbows soft. Match the arm rhythm to your steps and the water will feel “thicker,” which is exactly what you want.
Breathing And Rate Control
Pick a cadence you can hold. If you can talk in short phrases, you’re near a steady pace; if you can only get a few words out, you’re closer to a brisk push. That cue mirrors the CDC’s intensity advice and keeps effort honest without gadgets.
How This Compares To Land Walking
On land, brisk walking often falls near 4–5 METs depending on speed. In water, that same breathing pattern can sit higher at the same foot speed, because drag ramps up the work on every limb. That’s the draw: joint-friendly steps with a calorie burn comparable to a solid stroll on the track.
When To Pick A Different Water Option
Some days you’ll want variety. Jogging in place turns the dial up near 9.8 METs. A water aerobics class lands near ~5.5 METs with music and group cues. Those sessions can slot into a weekly plan that aims for the public health target of at least 150 weekly minutes at a moderate level.
Weekly Planning And Safe Progression
Plan The Mix
- Two steady pool walks of 20–30 minutes
- One interval session with short brisk bursts
- Optional class or jog in place session for variety
Progress Gradually
Add 5 minutes to one session each week, or add a single brisk interval. If soreness lingers, hold steady for a week. Good progress is boring and consistent.
Pair With Smart Nutrition
Fuel around the session with a light snack if needed, hydrate as you would for a land walk, and log totals in the same place you track steps and workouts. If you like tying activity to daily intake planning, you’ll find our plain-English explainer on daily calorie intake handy for context.
FAQ-Free Bottom Line
Pool steps scale well. Light sessions land near 2.5 METs; steady work sits around 4.5; brisk pushes reach ~6.8. Use the simple equation, check the tables, and you can set session targets that match your time, your weight, and your lane depth. The MET definitions come straight from CDC guidance, and the numeric values come from the research-based Compendium table for water activities.
Want a deep dive on land movement basics too? Try our benefits of exercise primer.