Most people burn roughly 60–140 calories per mile; body weight and pace decide where you land.
Easy Walk (2.5 mph)
Brisk Walk (3.5 mph)
Steady Run (6.0 mph)
Light & Level Mile
- 2.5–3.0 mph pace
- Flat route
- Relaxed arm swing
Low impact
Brisk Fitness Mile
- 3.3–4.0 mph pace
- Arms drive cadence
- Short gentle hills OK
Moderate effort
Steady Run Mile
- 5–6 mph pace
- Even breathing
- Level surface best
Vigorous
How Many Calories Are Lost In A Mile: By Weight And Pace
You burn energy each mile because your muscles move your body and keep it moving against drag, ground contact, and gravity. The most practical way to estimate that energy for walking or running is to use MET values from the Compendium of Physical Activities and convert them to calories with a simple equation. Calories per minute = MET × 3.5 × body weight in kilograms ÷ 200. Calories per mile = that value × minutes per mile (60 ÷ speed in mph). With the right MET, this gives solid ballpark numbers you can repeat mile after mile.
There’s also a classic rule for running: the energy cost per kilometer on level ground averages about 1 kilocalorie per kilogram of body mass. That works out to ~1.61 kcal per kilogram per mile, or ~0.73 kcal per pound per mile. Runners lean on that shortcut because it lines up with decades of lab data and keeps the math fast on the fly.
| Body Weight | Walk 3.5 mph | Run 6 mph |
|---|---|---|
| 60 kg (132 lb) | ~77 kcal/mile | ~103 kcal/mile |
| 70 kg (154 lb) | ~90 kcal/mile | ~120 kcal/mile |
| 80 kg (176 lb) | ~103 kcal/mile | ~137 kcal/mile |
These estimates come straight from the MET equation and the time needed to travel one mile at the listed speeds. They sit close to what many watches report. If your device shows higher or lower values, check three inputs: your weight setting, the grade along your route, and the actual pace recorded for that mile. All three shift the total.
Quick Ways To Estimate Your Per-Mile Burn
Use The MET Equation
Pick the MET for your pace, multiply by 3.5, multiply by your weight in kilograms, divide by 200; that gives calories per minute. Then multiply by minutes per mile. Example: a 70 kg walker at 3.5 mph (4.3 MET) needs 4.3 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 ≈ 5.26 kcal per minute. One mile at 3.5 mph takes 17.14 minutes, so that mile lands near 90 kcal.
Use The Runner’s Shortcut
Running on level ground costs about 1 kcal per kilogram per kilometer. To get calories per mile, multiply body weight in kilograms by 1.61. For pounds, multiply by 0.73. A 150 lb runner burns about 110 calories per mile; a 180 lb runner burns about 131. This shortcut holds well for steady road running without steep grades or strong wind.
Cross-check With Your Watch
Most GPS watches and phones rely on a blend of MET tables, heart-rate models, and lab-derived equations. They work well for trends, and they tighten up when your weight and heart-rate zones are set correctly. When a number looks odd, route profile or signal wobble is usually the reason.
Walking Versus Running A Mile: Why The Numbers Are Close
Many expect running a mile to burn twice what walking does. On flat ground the gap is smaller because the body’s cost per distance stays fairly steady. Running shows a near-constant energy cost per unit distance across speeds, while walking has a sweet spot near a moderate pace. Move much slower or much faster than that sweet spot and the cost per mile creeps up due to stability and step mechanics.
That’s why a slow 2.5 mph walk and a brisk 3.5 mph walk land in the same ballpark per mile, and why a 6 mph run beats both but not by a huge margin. You still move the same mass over the same distance either way; you just do it in less time when you run, which means a higher burn per minute and a modest increase per mile. For intensity labels, the CDC’s intensity guide helps match “brisk” walking and vigorous running so your chosen MET fits the effort.
Walking efficiency improves near your natural stride rate and length, then drops as you shuffle slower or rush faster. Running trades more impact for better elastic rebound, so you pay more moment to moment yet cover the mile quicker. The end result is a clear but not gigantic gap mile for mile.
Body Weight Changes The Math
All else equal, a heavier person expends more energy per mile than a lighter person because the calculation scales with body mass. The runner’s rule makes this easy to see: each extra pound adds ~0.73 calories to the mile. For walking, the MET equation produces the same linear effect. Someone at 90 kg will land about 50% higher than someone at 60 kg for the same route and pace.
Pace, Hills, And Surface
Grade lifts the cost quickly. A mild 1–5% uphill while walking nudges MET from the 4–5 range into the mid-5s, with steeper slopes pushing higher. Downhills shift the work to control; the burn dips slightly on gentle slopes and spikes when braking gets heavy. Softer or uneven surfaces like grass, sand, or trails also raise the cost thanks to reduced rebound and extra stabilization. Add a backpack or push a stroller and the number climbs again.
| Activity Scenario (70 kg) | MET | Approx. kcal/mile |
|---|---|---|
| Walking uphill 1–5% at 3.0 mph | 5.3 | ~130 |
| Backpacking with a daypack, ~3.0 mph | 7.8 | ~191 |
| Race-walking 5.0 mph, level | 8.3 | ~122 |
| Marching rapidly, no pack (~4.0 mph) | 8.0 | ~147 |
| Pushing a stroller 2.8–3.1 mph | 4.0 | ~98 |
Why Scientists Use METs And Per-Distance Rules
MET values come from lab studies that measure oxygen use at set speeds or tasks. One MET equals resting oxygen uptake of 3.5 mL per kilogram per minute and roughly 1 kcal per kilogram per hour. With that anchor, activities such as “walking 4.0 mph” or “running 7.5 mph” can be expressed as multiples of rest, and then converted to calories with a consistent method.
For running, the energy cost per distance on flat ground stays near a constant value, which is why the 1 kcal/kg/km rule works from easy jogs to faster efforts. Walking behaves differently: there’s an economical speed where the cost per distance bottoms out. Go much slower or faster and the per-mile cost rises, which matches what you feel during very slow strolls or near-trot power walks.
How To Personalize Your Numbers
Pick A Pace You Can Repeat
Use a recent mile split from an easy run or a steady walk. If you don’t track speed, time a mile on level ground using a phone or a marked loop. Aim for a pace you can repeat on normal days, not a one-off surge.
Grab The Right MET
Common level-ground values: 3.0 MET for a 2.5 mph walk, 4.3 MET for a 3.5 mph walk, 5.0 MET for a 4.0 mph walk, 8.3 MET for a 5.0 mph run, and 9.8 MET for a 6.0 mph run (Compendium). If your route climbs, pick the uphill entries matched to your speed band; even a small grade moves the needle.
Do The Short Math
Apply the formula: calories per minute = MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200. Then multiply by minutes per mile: minutes = 60 ÷ miles per hour. Round to the nearest five and you’ll be close to lab-style estimates.
Sense-check Against Your Records
If your watch, treadmill, or app reports very different mileage burns than the calculation, look for mismatched units, an outdated weight entry, or a route with more hills and turns than you realized. When the values converge over a few runs or walks, you can trust the number for planning.
Calories Lost Versus Weight Lost
“Calories lost” on a mile is the extra energy you spent above rest to cover that distance. Weight change comes from energy balance over many days. A single mile helps, yet the bigger win is a weekly rhythm that you enjoy. Use the tables to sketch a weekly target in miles that fits your schedule. Small, repeatable wins stack up fast.
Mile Facts That Stick
- Most people land between about 60 and 140 calories per mile from easy walks to steady runs on level ground.
- Body weight scales the number in a straight line; pace, hills, surface, and loads shift it up or down.
- The MET equation and the runner’s shortcut give quick, defensible estimates without special devices.
- Plan miles you can repeat. Consistency beats extremes for energy balance and day-to-day wellbeing.