How Many Calories Burned Weed Eating? | Yard Work Math

Weed eating burns roughly 120–165 calories per 30 minutes for a 70 kg person, depending on pace, terrain, and tool weight.

What Counts As Weed Trimming Effort?

Most backyard sessions blend walking, holding a trimmer, short reaches, and periodic bagging. That mix matches “power cutter/edger” work in the Compendium of Physical Activities. On that list, “trimming shrubs or trees, power cutter; using leaf blower or edger” sits around 3.3 MET, while “yardwork, moderate” groups near 4.0 MET. The minute you add slopes, thick brush, or hauling, your workload creeps up.

Calories Burned Using A Weed Trimmer: Real-World Ranges

The math uses a standard approach: calories per minute ≈ MET × 3.5 × body-weight(kg) ÷ 200. MET reflects intensity, and 1 MET equals sitting quietly. A steady trimming pace often lands near 3.3–4.0 MET; a hard push with heavy debris can edge higher. The tables below show practical estimates you can adapt to your yard and pace.

Quick Estimates By Weight And Time

This first table uses a steady “power cutter/edger” pace (≈3.3 MET). Pick the row closest to your weight and read across for a short session or a half hour.

Body Weight 15 Minutes 30 Minutes
50 kg (110 lb) ≈86 kcal ≈173 kcal
60 kg (132 lb) ≈103 kcal ≈206 kcal
70 kg (154 lb) ≈121 kcal ≈243 kcal
80 kg (176 lb) ≈138 kcal ≈276 kcal
90 kg (198 lb) ≈155 kcal ≈309 kcal

These estimates assume consistent movement rather than long idle time. Take breaks or stop to untangle line and the burn drops; add hills or thick growth and it rises. Snacks and meals still control body-weight change across weeks, so it helps to anchor your habits to your daily calorie intake.

How The Formula Works

The formula translates effort into energy. MET captures how strenuous the task is relative to rest, and the CDC frames moderate range as roughly 3.0–5.9 MET. Multiply the MET by 3.5 (ml O₂/kg/min), your weight in kilograms, then divide by 200 to get calories per minute. Round to the nearest 5–10 for easy planning; day-to-day variation is normal.

What Drives The Number Up Or Down

Tool And Setup

Battery packs, fuel weight, and balance change how hard your arms and core work. A heavy head with thick line or brush blade adds torque at the wrists and shoulders. A harness can shift some load to the hips. Adjusting handle height trims wasted effort from awkward reach.

Terrain And Growth

Soft soil, slopes, and tall or wet grass demand more ankle and hip control. Patches of woody stems require repeated passes that nudge intensity closer to yardwork in the 4.0–6.0 MET neighborhood.

Pace And Breaks

Short bursts with frequent starts feel taxing but can slash total minutes under load. A steady rhythm with smart pathing around beds often wins for net burn per hour.

Make Your Estimate Personal

Pick A MET That Fits Your Session

Use ~3.3 MET for smooth edging on level ground with light debris. Bump to ~4.0 MET when you add bagging, bending, and some slope. Push toward ~4.5–5.0 MET only if the job borders on brush clearing or if you’re raking and hauling between trims.

Work Through One Example

Say you weigh 68 kg and plan 35 minutes of mixed edging around beds. At 4.0 MET, calories per minute ≈ 4.0 × 3.5 × 68 ÷ 200 ≈ 4.76. Multiply by 35 minutes: about 167 kcal. If the yard is hilly and you’re bagging, a 4.5 MET choice lifts that to roughly 188 kcal.

Comparison With Other Yard Tasks

Where does trimming sit among common chores? Mowing with a walk-behind tends to land in the 4.5–6.0 MET band, raking hovers near 4.0 MET, while riding mowers fall closer to 2.5 MET. That makes string trimming a solid moderate-intensity activity for most people.

Why Official MET Lists Matter

The Compendium groups hundreds of daily activities with MET values so you aren’t guessing. “Power cutter/edger” and “yardwork, moderate” are the closest matches for trimming. The CDC explains how METs map to moderate or vigorous intensity, which helps you plan sessions that meet weekly movement targets. Linking your chores to these references gives repeatable estimates you can track month to month.

Practical Tips To Nudge Burn Higher

String Smarter, Not Longer

Plot a loop that limits backtracking. Stage bags and bins at corners, not mid-path. Keep spare line and batteries at the gate to avoid long walks to the garage.

Blend Movements

Alternate two minutes of trimming with one minute of brisk raking or bag carry. The short switch spikes heart rate without adding joint stress.

Use Small Form Tweaks

Neutral spine, ribs down, and elbows close to the body save energy. A gentle hip hinge beats a rounded back when reaching under shrubs.

Safety And Comfort While You Work

Prep And Gear

Eye and ear protection, gloves with grip, and long pants keep the session comfortable. In heat, plan shade breaks and keep water handy. Short sleeves and sunscreen help on open lots.

Fuel And Recovery

Yard sessions add up across a weekend. A light carb-plus-protein snack within an hour can help you bounce back for round two. Hydration matters more than you think when humidity climbs.

When Estimates Need Adjusting

Medical Conditions Or Medications

Some conditions change heart-rate response and perceived effort. If you use heart-rate targets for pacing, match them to how you feel and shorten bouts when needed.

Device Readings

Wrist and chest straps often over- or under-count with arm-heavy tasks. If your tracker swings wildly while trimming, stick with MET-based planning and treat device numbers as a loose cross-check.

Scenario Planner For A 70 kg Person

Pick the setup that resembles your yard. Values use the standard MET method described above.

Scenario MET 30-Min Calories
Edging Paths, Level Ground 3.3 ≈147 kcal
Mixed Beds With Bagging 4.0 ≈176 kcal
Brushy Corners + Slope 4.5 ≈198 kcal

Method And Sources

The estimates here follow the MET-based calculation used across exercise science and public-health materials. The Compendium of Physical Activities lists “power cutter/edger” near 3.3 MET and several yardwork tasks across 3.5–6.0 MET. The CDC page on measuring intensity explains how METs map to moderate and vigorous ranges. Charts from Harvard Health also show calories for gardening and mowing in a similar band for 30-minute blocks.

Turn Chores Into A Calorie Habit

Plan A Mini-Block

Two or three 10-minute trimming bursts fit nicely around weekend errands. Add a quick rake or bag carry between passes to bump intensity without adding much time.

Track What You Can Repeat

Jot down minutes worked and the MET you chose. Over a month, you’ll see a pattern that helps you plan big yard weekends and easier touch-ups during the week.

Wrap-Up: What To Remember

String trimming lands squarely in the moderate zone for most yards. Expect roughly 120–200 calories per half hour depending on weight, terrain, and pace. Use the tables to map your yard to a MET, multiply by minutes, and match effort to your goals.

Want a simple next step between yard days? Try a bit of walking for health to round out the week.