How Many Calories Does A 90-Minute Walk Burn? | Real-World Numbers

A 90-minute walk typically burns about 260–730 calories, depending on pace, terrain, and body weight.

Calorie Burn For A 1.5-Hour Walk: By Pace And Weight

Calorie burn scales with pace and body mass. The Compendium of Physical Activities lists walking at roughly 3.0 MET at 2.5 mph, ~4.8 MET at 3.5–3.9 mph, and ~5.5 MET at 4.0–4.4 mph on level ground. Those MET values come from standardized measurements used by exercise researchers and clinicians. The CDC also labels brisk walking as 2.5 mph or faster, which aligns with the mid-range values used here.

Broad Reference Table: 90 Minutes, Flat Route

This first table gives practical ranges for common body weights at two everyday paces. It assumes a flat path and no pack.

Body Weight Easy 2.5 mph (~3.0 MET) Brisk 3.5 mph (~4.8 MET)
125 lb (56.7 kg) ~268 kcal ~429 kcal
155 lb (70.3 kg) ~332 kcal ~531 kcal
185 lb (83.9 kg) ~396 kcal ~634 kcal

Once you know your typical route and pace, it gets easier to track your steps and get consistent with longer sessions. Link timing note: this reference is placed after the first table to keep early reading clean and scannable.

Why Your Number May Sit Above Or Below The Table

Speed: Faster steps raise METs, so the same 90-minute outing burns more at 4.2 mph than at 3.0 mph.

Terrain: Hills jump the cost per minute. The Compendium lists walking uphill at higher MET ratings than level ground, so rolling routes nudge totals upward.

Load: Carrying a pack or pushing a stroller also adds to the cost. The database includes those cases with higher MET values than un-loaded walking.

Fitness & form: Arm swing, stride length, and cadence shift oxygen use a little from person to person. Brisk usually means you can talk but not sing; that simple check keeps you in the moderate zone.

How We Estimated The Calories

To translate a MET value into calories, exercise physiology uses a standard equation: calories per minute = MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200. This stems from the convention that 1 MET is about 3.5 ml O2 per kg per minute, and ~5 kcal are spent per liter of oxygen. University sports-medicine guides and classroom handouts teach the same math, so you can recreate the numbers for your weight and pace.

Worked Example (So You Can Check Your Own)

Say you weigh 155 lb (≈70 kg) and your average speed is 3.5 mph on flat ground. Using ~4.8 MET:

  • Per minute: 4.8 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 ≈ 5.9 kcal
  • For 90 minutes: 5.9 × 90 ≈ 530 kcal

That lines up with the range in the first table. The same process works for any weight and any walking speed listed in the MET tables.

What Counts As Brisk For A Long Walk?

Public-health guidance treats brisk walking as 2.5 mph or faster. If you can speak in short sentences but not sing, you’re likely there. This intensity sits in the moderate band of 3.0–5.9 METs.

Want a second check? Compare your pace bands to the Compendium entries: ~3.0 MET at 2.5 mph, ~3.8 MET around 3.0 mph, ~4.8 MET at 3.5–3.9 mph, and ~5.5 MET near 4.0–4.4 mph on a firm, level surface.

Dialing In A Long Session For More Burn

Pick The Right Route

Flat loops are perfect for steady heart rate. Add short inclines if you want a little more challenge without changing total time. Hill segments move the MET number up.

Use Simple Surges

Every 10 minutes, add a 2–3-minute fast segment at a pace where talking is tough. This bumps your average intensity while keeping total time the same.

Keep Cadence Snappy

Quick steps with a relaxed arm swing bring you closer to the brisk band without feeling strained. Many walkers find the talk test easier to manage than watching a speed readout.

Detailed Reference: Calories By Pace (155 lb)

This second table uses a single body weight for clarity and shows how different speeds change the total for 90 minutes on level ground.

Pace Or Condition MET Value 90-Min Calories (155 lb)
2.5 mph (easy) ~3.0 ~332 kcal
3.0 mph (comfortable) ~3.8 ~421 kcal
3.5 mph (brisk) ~4.8 ~531 kcal
4.0–4.4 mph (fast) ~5.5 ~609 kcal
Gentle hills Higher than level Varies; expect a bump
Pack or stroller Higher than level Varies; expect a bump

Speed bands and special cases draw directly from the adult Compendium entries for level ground, hills, and load-carrying.

Common Questions About Long Walk Calorie Math

Do Apps Match These Numbers?

Most apps use the same MET-based math under the hood, paired with your weight and time. You’ll see small differences when GPS pace, terrain changes, or device estimates of weight and stride length vary.

Can I Use A 30-Minute Chart And Scale Up?

Yes—if pace stays steady. Harvard’s reference table shows walking at 3.5 mph burning 107, 133, and 159 calories in 30 minutes for 125, 155, and 185 lb. Multiply by three for a 90-minute outing at the same speed and you’ll land near the figures above.

Where Brisk Fits In Weekly Goals

Public guidance recommends at least 150 minutes of moderate activity each week. Two 90-minute brisk sessions already reach that mark. The talk test is a handy check during a long loop.

Smart Ways To Stretch Your Burn Without Extra Time

Add Micro-Hills

Even short slopes lift effort. A loop with two brief climbs can nudge your average MET value higher than a pancake-flat out-and-back.

Use A Swingy Arm Drive

Relaxed shoulders and a natural arm swing help you hold a quicker cadence at the same perceived effort.

Keep Fuel And Footwear Simple

Water for warm days, a light snack if you’re out long, and shoes that feel good at your chosen pace. No need for a pack on flat routes if comfort is the goal.

Bottom Line

A long walk is steady, sustainable cardio that burns a few hundred calories and leaves you fresher for the next day. Pace and body mass drive the math. Use the simple MET equation to tailor the estimate to your stats, match your speed bands to the Compendium entries, and you’ll have a number that’s close enough to plan meals and training time.

Want a deeper primer on energy balance? Try our calorie deficit guide for step-by-step planning.

Sources: CDC intensity basics; Compendium MET values for walking; UC Denver energy-expenditure formula; Harvard 30-minute calories table.