How Many Calories Am I Burning At Work? | Desk Job Math

Calorie burn at work ranges from about 600–1,600 kcal over an 8-hour shift, depending on your weight, pace, and the tasks you do.

Calories Burned At Work: Real-World Ranges

Your workday burn isn’t one number. It swings with your tasks, weight, pace, posture, and how often you move. Two people can share a role and finish with different totals, just because one breaks up sitting and the other stays glued to the chair.

To size things up, exercise scientists use MET values. One MET is resting. Higher METs mean more energy. The handy bit: an hourly estimate is MET × body weight (kg); a shift estimate adds the hours you do that activity. The Compendium of Activities lists common work tasks and their METs, and the CDC explains how intensity maps to METs.

Common Work Tasks And Shift Burn (70 kg, 8 hours)

Task MET kcal/shift
Seated typing, email 1.3 ~730
Standing desk, light tasks 1.8 ~1,010
Retail sales, slow walking 2.3 ~1,290
Stocking shelves, light 3.0 ~1,680
Carpentry, light-moderate 3.6 ~2,020
Messenger, brisk walking 4.0 ~2,240

These are averages for steady tasks. Real shifts mix chores, breaks, and pacing. So your number lands somewhere in the band, not on a single tick mark.

How To Calculate Your Work Calories

Grab your weight in kilograms. Pick the closest MET for each chunk of your day. Use the MET × kg × hours formula for each chunk, then add them up. Rough cut? Split your day into three blocks: morning, midday, late shift.

Three-Block Method

  • Block 1: What did you mostly do? Sitting, standing, or on-feet?
  • Block 2: Any errands, stairs, or floor walks?
  • Block 3: Same check: seated focus, mixed, or active?

Plug each block into the formula. If your weight is in pounds, divide by 2.205 first. You can bump the MET up a notch when your pace picks up, or drop it when things slow down.

Desk Moves That Raise Burn Without Killing Focus

You don’t need a gym to move the needle. Small swaps lift your total without derailing deep work. Think posture shifts, tiny walks, and short bursts you’d do anyway.

Low-Friction Habits

  • Stand up for the first five minutes of each hour.
  • Walk the long way to the printer, kitchen, or restroom.
  • Take calls on your feet, pacing the room or hallway.
  • Use the stairs for short hops.
  • Refill water often to seed extra steps.

These tiny changes add up. A few hundred extra steps each hour turns a quiet desk day into a mixed day, and your kilojoules follow.

Sitting Versus Standing: What The Math Says

Standing isn’t a calorie bonanza, yet it beats parking in a chair all day. At common desk speeds, standing lands near 1.8 MET versus 1.3 for seated work. Across eight hours, that gap can clear 300–350 kcal for a 70 kg person.

A better play is to alternate: chunks of focus in the chair, then spells at the standing desk. Mix in short hallway loops and the total climbs again without wrecking posture or comfort.

Sample Shift Math You Can Copy

Here’s a quick template you can tweak. Pick your weight, swap times to match your day, and change METs when your pace changes.

Template For A Mixed Office Day (70 kg)

  1. 9:00–11:00 seated focus (1.3 MET) → 1.3 × 70 × 2 = 182 kcal
  2. 11:00–12:00 stand + light tasks (1.8 MET) → 1.8 × 70 × 1 = 126 kcal
  3. 13:00–15:00 meetings + hallway walks (2.0 MET) → 2.0 × 70 × 2 = 280 kcal
  4. 15:00–17:00 seated wrap-up (1.3 MET) → 1.3 × 70 × 2 = 182 kcal

Total for this pattern: ~770 kcal during work hours. Add your commute and after-work steps, and your full-day total will be higher.

Small Changes And Extra Calories Per Shift (70 kg)

Change Time Extra kcal
Stand 2 hours spread out ~120–160
3×10-min brisk walks breaks ~120–180
Stairs: 10 floors daily ~50–80
Walk-and-talk calls 40 minutes ~80–120
Errand batching 15 minutes ~30–50

What Changes The Number Most

Body weight: The formula scales linearly. Heavier bodies burn more per hour at the same MET. Lighter bodies burn less. No fancy math here.

Task mix: One hour of slow steps can beat two hours of sitting. If your role lets you batch errands or walk the stairs, your shift total rises fast.

Pace: A relaxed stroll isn’t the same as a brisk loop. When you push the pace, METs tick up and so does your tally.

Breaks: Short, steady breaks with light movement win. Long seated breaks sink the average.

Common Misreads To Avoid

Desk jobs burn nothing? Not true. Even quiet typing adds up across eight hours. That said, long seated stretches drag your average.

Standing all day is best? Not quite. Pure standing can stress feet and back. Switching positions and taking short walks works better for most people.

Wearables always nail it? Nice for trends, rough for exact math at low intensities. Use them as a guide, then spot check with the MET formula.

Fast Calculator: Two Numbers And You’re Done

Pick a MET for your main task and for your second-most common task. Multiply each by your weight and hours spent. Add them. That’s a solid day estimate without a spreadsheet.

Your Best Next Step

Map tomorrow’s shift on a sticky note: hours seated, hours standing, minutes walking. Run the quick math once in the morning. Then nudge the plan with one extra loop each hour. Small wins stack, and the numbers will show it.