How Many Calories Are Burned On Spin Bike? | Real-World Numbers

Spin bike workouts burn roughly 210–600 calories in 30–60 minutes for a 70 kg rider, depending on intensity and resistance.

Calorie burn on indoor bikes comes from power, body weight, and time. The math used in exercise physiology converts intensity into metabolic equivalents, or METs. One MET equals resting energy use. A ride that averages 7–9 METs lands in moderate to vigorous territory. A sprint block can spike to 11–14 METs.

The calorie equation is simple: calories ≈ MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200 × minutes. A class that averages 8.5 MET for 45 minutes for a 70 kg rider works out near 468 calories. Swings happen with resistance, cadence, fit, fan cooling, and room heat.

Calories Burned On A Spin Bike Per 30–60 Minutes: Real Numbers

Here’s a compact table you can use to plan sessions. MET values come from the Compendium of Physical Activities, and the intensity labels match CDC intensity ranges.

Workout Intensity MET Calories/30 Min (70 kg)
Light pedals, 51–89 W 4.8–5.5 ~175–200
Moderate, 90–160 W 6.8–8.8 ~250–320
Spin class average 8.5 ~300
Vigorous, 161–200 W 11.0 ~375–400
Very vigorous, 201–270 W 14.0 ~475–510

Numbers above reflect typical class pacing. You can tune weight targets once you set your daily calorie needs.

How The Calorie Math Works

Studio consoles often show speed and distance, yet coaching cues center on resistance and cadence. Power in watts blends both, and that’s why the Compendium lists indoor cycling by watt bands. Higher average watts push the MET up, which raises the burn.

Use The MET Formula

Step one: find the average MET for your ride. A steady tempo class sits near 7–9 MET. Intervals jump above 11 MET during work bouts and drop during recovery, with many riders landing near 8–10 MET on average across the whole session.

Worked Example

Rider: 70 kg. Class: 45 minutes at an average of 8.5 MET. Calculation: 8.5 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 × 45 ≈ 468 calories. If the rider weighs 85 kg, the same class hits ~568 calories. At 60 kg, the estimate sits near ~402 calories.

Dial In Intensity Without A Power Meter

No power readout? Use talk-test cues, perceived effort, and breathing rhythm, which align with CDC guidance. If you can talk but can’t sing, you’re in moderate land. If speech breaks into brief phrases, you’re nudging vigorous.

What Drives Differences Between Riders

Same bike, same class, different numbers. Body size changes oxygen demand. Fit changes joint angles and muscle recruitment. Heat raises heart rate and strains cooling, which can trim power. Hydration and carbs matter for longer blocks.

Body Weight And Composition

Heavier bodies expend more energy at the same MET. Lean mass helps push higher wattage at a given heart rate. Two riders at 150 W won’t burn the same calories if one weighs 55 kg and the other 85 kg.

Technique And Setup

Seat height sets knee tracking and power. Bars that sit too low can choke breathing. Cleated shoes smooth the pedal circle and help hold cadence, which keeps the average MET up for the same RPE.

Class Design

Some instructors build long steady blocks. Others run short sprints with big gears. Average calories track time near threshold and the recovery ratio across the hour.

Practical Targets For Different Goals

Not every session needs a hard edge. Pair the day’s goal with the right structure. Use the table below as a menu: two styles, one common length, three body weights. Assumes average 8.0 MET for tempo and 10.5 MET for intervals.

Body Weight Tempo 45 Min Intervals 45 Min
55 kg ~346 kcal ~454 kcal
70 kg ~441 kcal ~579 kcal
85 kg ~536 kcal ~705 kcal

Weekly Rhythm

Many riders stay fresh with two tempo days and one spicy day. Add light spins on strength days. Public guidelines point to 150 minutes of moderate or 75 minutes of vigorous activity each week across any mix you enjoy.

How To Improve Calorie Burn Safely

Small tweaks add up. A half-turn of resistance lifts watts without wrecking cadence. Fan cooling keeps power stable by helping heat loss. A short rise in saddle height can free hip angle and open breathing.

Use Power, Not Pace

Speed on a studio bike is artificial. Power is the better anchor. Watching average watts during work blocks teaches pacing. If your studio lists threshold power, target 85–95% for tempo and 105–120% for short efforts.

Mind The Recovery

Spending more minutes near threshold raises total burn. Recovery that’s too deep drags the class average. Keep easy minutes light but not limp so the next push arrives sooner.

Pair Nutrition To The Session

Short rides need water and maybe electrolytes. Longer or harder rides benefit from small carbs, which help hold power. Weight goals still hinge on energy balance across the day.

Health Benefits Beyond Calories

Indoor cycling trains the heart and lungs, supports joint-friendly conditioning, and fits rest-day needs. Public sources tie regular activity to better sleep, lower blood pressure, and lower risk of chronic disease.

Want a step-by-step walkthrough? Try our calorie deficit guide.