How Many Calories Does 1 Hour Walking Burn? | Quick Walk Facts

In one hour, walking burns about 180–450 calories, from an easy 2 mph stroll to a brisk 4 mph pace, with body weight and incline shifting the total.

Walking torches calories in a clean, predictable way. Time, pace, body weight, grade, and surface each nudge the burn. You don’t need a tracker to get a solid estimate either. With a few anchors and a simple formula, you can size your hourly burn with confidence.

Researchers assign METS (metabolic equivalents) to common paces. One MET is the energy you use at rest; higher numbers mean more effort. A flat 3.5 mph walk sits around 4.3 METs, while 4.0 mph lands near 5.0. Those values come from the Compendium of Physical Activities, the standard catalog used in labs and clinics.

To convert METs to calories for a one-hour walk, multiply the MET by your body weight in kilograms. That’s it. A 70 kg adult at 4.0 mph (5.0 MET) burns about 350 kcal in an hour. The same person at 3.0 mph (3.3 MET) lands closer to 231 kcal. Brisk starts around 3 mph per the CDC intensity guide, so pace up if you want a bigger number.

Calories burned walking 1 hour: what changes it

1-hour walking calories by pace (level ground unless noted)
Pace or condition 57 kg (125 lb) 70 kg (155 lb)
2.0 mph, level 160 kcal 196 kcal
2.5 mph, level 171 kcal 210 kcal
3.0 mph, level 188 kcal 231 kcal
3.5 mph, level 245 kcal 301 kcal
4.0 mph, level 285 kcal 350 kcal
4.5 mph, level 399 kcal 490 kcal
3.0 mph, uphill 1–5% grade 302 kcal 371 kcal
3.0 mph, uphill 6–15% grade 456 kcal 560 kcal

Need a heavier example? At 84 kg (185 lb), multiply the MET by 84 to get your hourly burn. For instance, 4.0 mph comes out near 420 kcal.

Speed isn’t the only lever. A mild uphill grade spikes the cost fast. The Compendium lists 5.3 METs for 3.0 mph at a 1–5% grade, and around 8.0 METs for 6–15%. Lab work echoes this: energy cost rose about 52% at 5% and more than doubled at 10% against level walking in one analysis.

Surface and technique matter too. Grass and sand add friction, so you spend more energy at the same speed. Using Nordic poles brings the upper body into the job and bumps energy use. The Compendium shows small but real lifts for poles on level ground and a larger lift on hills.

Weight sets the baseline. Two people walking side by side at the same pace won’t match the same number. The heavier person burns more because the MET equation scales with body mass.

Pick a pace that fits your goal

Chasing an exact number can turn into math soup. A cleaner plan is to pick a pace that fits your day and stack time. Here’s a quick guide you can steal anytime.

Easy walk: recovery and errands

Think 2.0–2.5 mph on flat ground. You can chat without gasping, and joints stay happy. Calorie burn lands in the lower band from the card. Use this zone on rest days, after strength work, or when you need movement without stress.

Everyday walk: heart health and habit

Set a smooth 2.8–3.2 mph rhythm. You’ll speak in short sentences. The CDC counts this as moderate intensity. One hour here racks up a few hundred calories and helps you meet the 150-minute weekly target for aerobic activity.

Power walk: weight control and pace work

Push into 3.5–4.5 mph. Stride tall, drive the arms, and keep cadence snappy. The meter jumps from the low 200s into the mid-300s or more for a 70 kg adult. If joints allow, add short hills for a serious bump.

Ways to stretch your one-hour burn

Add a gentle grade

A treadmill set to 3–5% or a route with rolling sidewalks does the trick. At 3.0 mph, a 5% grade often adds around 140 kcal per hour for a 70 kg adult. A 10% grade adds far more. Use downhills to cool legs and keep form tidy.

Switch the surface

Grass, packed trails, or firm sand raise the energy cost without extra speed. That change can add tens of calories across an hour, while feet enjoy softer landings.

Use poles when it helps

Nordic poles share the work with your upper body. On level paths the lift is modest. On hills, the extra drive pays off. If you like backpacking or rucking later, poles are handy skill practice.

Split the hour

Two 30-minute walks can match one 60-minute session for total burn. A short post-meal walk also tames glucose swings and feels easy to keep.

Turn calories into weekly targets

Let’s say you weigh 70 kg. Three one-hour walks at 3.0 mph net roughly 700 kcal for the week. Bump one session to 4.0 mph and add a mild hill, and that week climbs near 1,100 kcal. Pair that with a steady menu and you’ll see momentum without burnout.

Step counts can help with rhythm. Many walkers hit 6,000–7,500 steps in an hour on flat ground, depending on height and stride. Pace moves the needle more than tiny tweaks in step length.

Incline effect at 3.0 mph (70 kg example)
Condition Calories/hour Note
3.0 mph, level (3.3 MET) 231 kcal Baseline
3.0 mph, 5% grade (5.3 MET) 371 kcal +~60% vs level
3.0 mph, 10% grade (8.0 MET) 560 kcal +~140% vs level

Hills change the math faster than gadgets. If weight loss is the aim, treat grade like a dimmer switch. Nudge it up just enough to raise the heart rate while you keep a smooth gait.

Safety cues and form tips

Use the talk test

If you can speak in sentences, you’re in the moderate zone. Short phrases mean you’re edging toward vigorous. That quick gut check keeps pace right without a monitor.

Mind joints and shoes

Pick shoes that match your arch and the surface. Mix routes to spread stress. Swap a fast day for an easy stroll if ankles, knees, or hips start barking.

Stay hydrated and visible

Carry water on warm days. Add a light or a bright vest near traffic. Small habits make outdoor walks smoother and safer.

A simple one-hour walking plan

Warm up for 5 minutes at an easy pace. Settle into 40 minutes at your target speed. Add one or two 5-minute hill segments if terrain allows. Cool down for 5 minutes, finish with a few calf and hamstring stretches, and you’re done.

Weekly template

  • Day 1: 60 minutes easy (2.0–2.5 mph)
  • Day 3: 60 minutes steady (2.8–3.2 mph)
  • Day 5: 60 minutes brisk with short hills (3.5–4.0 mph)

That mix balances comfort, heart health, and total burn. If you feel fresh, extend one day by 10–15 minutes or add a mild grade. If fatigue sets in, scale back and keep the habit alive.

One-hour walking scenarios

Here are three quick walk plans with the math done for you:

  • Lunch break spin: 70 kg adult, 3.0 mph on flat paths. MET ≈ 3.3. Hourly burn ≈ 231 kcal.
  • Evening push: 70 kg adult, 4.0 mph for 40 minutes, then 20 minutes at 3.0 mph. Calories ≈ (350 × 0.67) + (231 × 0.33) ≈ 310 kcal.
  • Hill loop: 70 kg adult, 30 minutes at 3.0 mph level and 30 minutes at 3.0 mph with a 5% grade. Calories ≈ 231 /2 + 371 /2 ≈ 301 kcal.

Swap your body weight into those same METs to tailor the totals. The math scales cleanly because METs track energy cost per kilogram. Pace and grade set the MET. Your weight multiplies the result. Done.