How Many Calories Burned Washing Dishes? | Quick Home Math

Washing dishes burns about 56–94 calories per 30 minutes for 120–180-lb adults (2.0 MET, light effort).

Calories Burned While Washing Dishes: Simple Math

Short answer: dish duty counts. Light sink work is logged at 2.0 MET in the Adult Compendium, which classifies it as low intensity. MET is a standard way to translate movement into energy use.

Here’s the quick formula you can use any time you want a number: Calories = MET × body weight(kg) × minutes ÷ 60. Plug in 2.0 for MET when you’re just standing at the sink rinsing, soaping, and setting plates to dry.

Fast Reference Table (By Weight)

The chart below shows estimates for three time blocks using the 2.0 MET value. Pick the row closest to your body weight.

Body Weight 30 Minutes 60 Minutes
100 lb (45 kg) 45 kcal 90 kcal
120 lb (54 kg) 54 kcal 108 kcal
140 lb (64 kg) 64 kcal 128 kcal
155 lb (70 kg) 70 kcal 140 kcal
170 lb (77 kg) 77 kcal 154 kcal
180 lb (82 kg) 82 kcal 164 kcal
200 lb (91 kg) 91 kcal 182 kcal
220 lb (100 kg) 100 kcal 200 kcal
250 lb (113 kg) 113 kcal 226 kcal

Numbers like these sit in the light bucket. They still add up over a week of meals and snacks, and they often replace couch time.

What Changes The Burn

Several factors move the needle: sink height and posture, pace, how many pots and pans you tackle, drying and shelving distance, and how much walking you do while resetting the kitchen. Add scrubbing or trips across the room and the energy cost climbs toward mixed kitchen work at 3.3 MET. See the Home Activities list for the exact entries.

Public health pages use MET examples to mark light, moderate, and vigorous zones. That framing helps you judge pace without a lab. If breathing is easy and speech is normal, you’re likely in the light range. If speech turns chatty but a bit warm, you’ve moved into moderate territory; the CDC’s page on measuring intensity shows handy cues.

Want your daily total to be clearer? Many people find it easier to compare cleanup to other tasks once they’ve looked at their daily calorie burn.

Method: Where The Numbers Come From

The Adult Compendium assigns codes and MET values to everyday motions. In the Home Activities section you’ll see two entries that match sink work: “wash dishes, standing” at 2.0 MET and “clearing dishes from table, walking” at 2.0 MET. A combined “kitchen activity, general” sits at 3.3 MET. These entries let you estimate energy use with the same math researchers apply.

The categories aren’t meant to be perfect for every kitchen. They’re reference points. Your posture, cadence, and room layout bring natural swing. That’s why the ranges in the chart are estimates, not lab-grade measures.

Make The Most Of Sink Time

You can keep the task gentle or nudge it toward a tiny workout. Small tweaks go a long way and they don’t require gear.

Smart Setup

  • Stack plates by size so motions flow in one direction.
  • Use warm water; it encourages steady pace.
  • If the counter is low, widen your stance to keep your back neutral.

Move More Without Thinking About It

  • Break the job into two 15-minute sessions around meals.
  • Carry small stacks to shelves across the room instead of one heavy pile.
  • Rotate tasks: soak pans, wipe surfaces, then return to rinsing.

Pair It With Strength Snacks

  • Heel raises while you wait for a soak cycle.
  • Light squats as you reach lower cupboards.
  • Single-arm holds with a stack of bowls to wake up your grip.

Common Situations And Estimates

Quick reset after dinner (12–15 minutes): rinse plates, wash cutlery, wipe a small section of counter. A 170-lb person lands near 39–43 kcal at 2.0 MET.

Weekend cleanup (30–40 minutes): more pots, a sticky pan, a few trips to the pantry. That same person ranges from 77–103 kcal at 2.0–2.7 MET depending on pace.

Deep scrub day (45–60 minutes): pan soaking, stubborn residue, sink polish, and long shelving paths. At 3.3 MET, a 170-lb person reaches ~154–206 kcal across that window.

How To Estimate Your Own Session

Step 1: Pick The MET

Use 2.0 MET for relaxed washing while mostly standing in one spot. If the job includes lots of scrubbing, wiping, or trips to the pantry, bump to 3.3 MET.

Step 2: Convert Weight

Take pounds divided by 2.2046 to get kilograms. A 170-lb person is 77 kg.

Step 3: Do The Math

Multiply MET × kilograms × minutes, then divide by 60. A 170-lb person at 2.0 MET for 20 minutes: 2.0 × 77 × 20 ÷ 60 ≈ 51 kcal.

Safety And Comfort Tips

Hand Care

Use gloves if water is hot or if soaps dry your skin. Switch the scrubbing hand often to share the load.

Back And Shoulders

Keep dishes close to midline. Slide heavy pots in the sink before scrubbing. Take tiny breaks to reset posture.

Footwear And Floor

Non-slip shoes beat barefoot on wet tile. Wipe spills right away to avoid sliding while you carry stacks.

How This Fits Your Activity Week

House tasks won’t replace planned workouts, but they pad daily movement and break up long sits. Federal pages describe weekly targets and show ways to hit them with different mixes of walking, cycling, and at-home movement. Your sink sessions can be part of that mix.

Chore-By-Chore Comparison Table

Here’s where the sink lands next to a few other staples. Values use Compendium METs and a 155-lb midpoint for simple math.

Activity MET 30 Minutes (155 lb)
Wash dishes, standing 2.0 70 kcal
Kitchen activity, general 3.3 116 kcal
Vacuuming, general 3.0 106 kcal
Mopping, standing 2.5 88 kcal
Scrubbing bathroom, moderate 3.5 124 kcal

Those values let you mix and match your day. Fifteen minutes at the sink plus a quick mop can land you near a short walk on a step counter.

Want a deeper plan? You might like our calorie deficit guide for a bigger picture on energy balance.