A 5-mile jog burns about 450–800 calories, with body weight, pace, and terrain shifting the total.
Lighter Runner
Mid-Range
Heavier Runner
Easy Day
- 12:00/mi (5.0 mph)
- About 60 minutes total
- Lower strain; steady breath
Recovery Pace
Steady Day
- 10:00/mi (6.0 mph)
- About 50 minutes total
- Talk in short phrases
Aerobic Work
Hard Day
- 8:35/mi (7.0 mph)
- ~43 minutes total
- Strong effort; focused form
Tempo Feel
Calories Burned On A Five-Mile Run — The Ranges
Distance rules the math. For level ground, the energy cost of steady running hovers near one kilocalorie per kilogram per kilometer. That keeps totals consistent across speeds for the same route. Time still matters a bit because a slower outing keeps you moving longer, which adds a small bump from posture and arm swing.
To give you a clear window, here’s a broad range that fits most adults. A small runner often lands near 450–500 kcal for five miles. A mid-size runner falls near 550–650 kcal. A larger runner can sit around 700–850 kcal. Hills, wind, heat, and extra layers can push the number higher.
How We Estimate The Burn
Two simple tools get you close: MET values and body weight. MET ties an activity to a multiple of resting oxygen use. Jogging near 5.0–5.5 mph lines up with MET values around 8.5–9.0, while 6.0–7.0 mph sits near 9.8–11.0 based on the Compendium MET values. Calories per minute follow a standard formula that multiplies MET by 3.5, your weight in kilograms, and time, divided by 200. That gives a close estimate for steady, level running.
Broad Table: Five-Mile Calories By Weight And Pace
This reference table uses common paces and body weights on a flat route. Values come from MET ranges for steady running and the standard energy math. Treat them as guideposts, not lab-grade numbers.
| Body Weight | Pace (mph) | Estimated Calories For 5 Miles |
|---|---|---|
| 120 lb (54 kg) | 5.0 | ≈485 |
| 120 lb (54 kg) | 6.0 | ≈470 |
| 120 lb (54 kg) | 7.0 | ≈450 |
| 150 lb (68 kg) | 5.0 | ≈605 |
| 150 lb (68 kg) | 6.0 | ≈585 |
| 150 lb (68 kg) | 7.0 | ≈560 |
| 180 lb (82 kg) | 5.0 | ≈730 |
| 180 lb (82 kg) | 6.0 | ≈700 |
| 180 lb (82 kg) | 7.0 | ≈675 |
| 200 lb (91 kg) | 5.0 | ≈810 |
| 200 lb (91 kg) | 6.0 | ≈775 |
| 200 lb (91 kg) | 7.0 | ≈745 |
Totals cluster by distance and body mass. Set your target pace, then scan the row that matches your weight. Snacks fit better once you set your daily calorie needs, since that frames your training day.
Why Faster Isn’t Always “More Calories”
Speed trims time on feet. A fast five cuts minutes, which trims the total a touch even though the effort feels higher. That’s why a steady run at 6.0 mph can sit near the same total as an easy hour at 5.0 mph for the same person. Over hills or in heat, longer exposure often nudges the number upward.
The Per-Mile Rule Of Thumb
A clean shortcut many coaches use is “about three-quarters of a calorie per pound per mile.” That places a 150-lb runner near 560–575 kcal for five miles, lining up with the table above. Sports physiology research also shows an energy cost near one kilocalorie per kilogram per kilometer for steady running on level ground, a figure echoed in classic lab work on oxygen cost.
Method: From METs To Calories You Can Use
Here’s the street-level version of the math:
Step-By-Step
- Pick a steady pace that matches your outing.
- Grab the MET for that pace (e.g., ~8.5 at ~5.0 mph; ~9.8 at ~6.0 mph; ~11.0 at ~7.0 mph from the Compendium).
- Convert weight to kilograms (lb ÷ 2.2046).
- Plug into the quick formula: Calories = MET × 3.5 × kg ÷ 200 × minutes.
- Minutes = distance ÷ mph × 60. For five miles: 60 min at 5.0 mph; 50 min at 6.0 mph; about 43 min at 7.0 mph.
Want a wider context for weight control? See the CDC overview on physical activity and weight. It explains why movement plus nutrition planning works best.
Real-World Factors That Nudge The Total
Hills And Headwinds
Climbing adds work. Even gentle grades across a route can add minutes and raise the total. Strong wind acts like an invisible hill; on an out-and-back, it often evens out, but a steady headwind for long stretches will show up on your watch and in your hunger.
Heat, Cold, And Layers
Hot days increase sweat rate and slow pace. Cold days add clothes and stiffness at the start. Both conditions can raise energy use for the same map loop.
Surface And Shoes
Soft trails soak up energy. Track and firm paths return more. Cushioned trainers can alter gait slightly and change cost a bit. The distance rule still holds best for estimates.
Running Economy
Two runners of the same weight can show different numbers because of stride and mechanics. Over time, strength work, drills, and consistent mileage improve economy and bring your totals closer to the rule of thumb.
Fine-Tune Your Five-Mile Plan
Use the table at the top to set an estimate, then adjust based on route and feel. If you push hills or add heat, slide your number up a notch. If you glide a cool, flat loop at a steady clip, pick the lower end of your range.
Fueling For The Distance
Many runners finish five miles without mid-run carbs. Yet on warm days or back-to-back sessions, a small pre-run snack helps. Aim for a light carb source 30–90 minutes before you head out, sip water based on thirst, and save bigger meals for post-run recovery.
Recovery That Matches The Effort
After a steady five, plan a balanced plate with protein, carbs, and some fluid. Stretching, an easy walk, and a short mobility set can help your next session feel smooth.
When You Want A Tighter Number
Track your own pace and weight, then run the MET math above. If your route includes steady climbs, add a small buffer. Over a month, compare your estimates with body-weight trends and how hungry you feel on training days. Your pattern will settle into a reliable range.
Five-Mile Time Guide By Pace
Use this quick chart to map pace to finish time for five miles. It pairs well with the calorie ranges you saw above.
| Pace (min:sec per mile) | Finish Time For 5 Miles | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 12:00 | 1:00:00 | Easy hour on flat paths |
| 11:00 | 55:00 | Comfortable chat pace |
| 10:00 | 50:00 | Steady aerobic work |
| 9:30 | 47:30 | Solid effort; short phrases |
| 9:00 | 45:00 | Strong but controlled |
| 8:35 | 42:55 | Challenging tempo feel |
Smart Ways To Raise Or Lower The Burn
Want A Bigger Calorie Total?
- Pick a hillier route or add short climbs.
- Run the same distance at a touch slower pace to extend time on feet.
- Add light strides or short surges late in the run.
Want To Keep It Lower?
- Choose a flat loop and steady pace.
- Run in cooler parts of the day.
- Wear light layers and skip the heavy pack.
Safety Notes For Newer Runners
Build up gradually. If five miles is new, add distance in small steps and slot a rest day between runs early on. If you have a health condition, chat with your clinician about a plan that fits your situation. During the run, slow to a walk if you feel dizzy, light-headed, or sharp pain.
Bring It All Together
Five miles is a tidy benchmark. Set a pace that suits the day, read the tables, and land on a calorie range that fits your weight and route. Keep notes for a few weeks and you’ll spot a number that tracks your own training pattern.
Want a friendly nudge for movement on non-running days? Try our benefits of exercise piece for ideas that pair well with running.