How Many Calories An Hour Does Skiing Burn? | Slope-Smart Math

Skiing calorie burn ranges from about 300 to 1,100 per hour, depending on style, pace, and body weight.

Calories Burned Per Hour While Skiing: Real-World Ranges

Energy burn on snow swings widely. A relaxed resort lap with long chairlift rides lands near 300 calories per hour for a 70 kg (155 lb) skier. A steady, lap-after-lap rhythm bumps that closer to 400. Classic or skate Nordic sessions can push 650–1,100 per hour when the pace climbs.

These numbers come from metabolic equivalents of task (METs). Downhill sits around 4.3–8.0 MET depending on effort; cross-country spans 7.0–15.0 based on speed and terrain. Those MET ranges are cataloged in the Compendium of Physical Activities, which researchers and coaches use to translate movement into energy use.

Quick Reference Table: Styles, METs, And Hourly Burn

This table uses a 70 kg baseline and assumes active time (moving on snow). Idle time on lifts or in the lodge lowers totals.

Style & Effort MET kcal/hour (70 kg)
Downhill — Light 4.3 ≈315
Downhill — Moderate 5.3 ≈390
Downhill — Vigorous 8.0 ≈590
Cross-Country — Easy (2.5 mph) 6.8–7.0 ≈500–515
Cross-Country — Moderate (4–4.9 mph) 9.0 ≈660
Cross-Country — Brisk (5–7.9 mph) 12.5 ≈920
Cross-Country — Racing (>8 mph) 15.0 ≈1,100

These per-hour figures fit best once you know your daily calories burned, since ski time is only one slice of your total energy use.

How We Estimate Skiing Energy Burn

The math is straightforward. MET tells you how many times above rest your body is working. One MET equals resting intensity. The formula translates MET into calories per minute:

Calorie Formula

kcal per minute = 0.0175 × MET × body weight (kg)

Now multiply by your minutes on snow. That yields an hourly range you can trust without a lab test. The CDC explains METs in plain terms if you’d like a quick refresher on intensity and the “talk test.”

Why Resort Days Often Show Lower Numbers

Chairlifts, lines, and breaks all count as non-active time. MET values for downhill refer to active sliding, not the whole hour at the mountain. A fitness tracker that only logs “moving minutes” often lines up with Compendium math; a device that averages idle time into the hour will show less burn.

What Changes Your Ski Calorie Burn

Body Weight

Heavier bodies expend more energy at a given MET because there’s more mass to move. A 90 kg skier will burn about 30% more than a 70 kg skier at the same pace.

Effort And Style

Short, careful turns on mellow runs sit near the low end. Strong edging, skating to the lift, and quicker laps nudge you up. Nordic sessions hold steady intensity, so the hourly tally climbs fast.

Terrain, Snow, And Weather

Sticky spring snow, long traverses, and wind raise effort. Firm groomers and well-gliding skis cost less energy per turn. Uphill segments (sidestepping, skinning) spike the MET level.

Skill And Efficiency

Clean technique wastes less motion. Beginners often work hard just staying balanced; advanced skiers manage edges and pressure with fewer extra movements at the same speed.

Downhill Days: Turning Chair Time Into Clear Numbers

Plan your expectations around active minutes. If you ski 30 minutes of actual sliding inside an hour, cut the table numbers in half. If you stack near-continuous laps on quieter slopes, you’ll get closer to the full per-hour estimate.

Simple Planning Tip

Use a lap timer or watch “auto-pause.” Track how much you truly move. Pair that with the MET formula, and you’ll have totals that match what you feel in your legs.

Nordic And Backcountry: Why The Totals Spike

Classic and skate techniques keep you working. Even at a social pace, you’re moving most minutes. That’s why cross-country sits near 7–9 MET for steady cruising and climbs to 12.5–15 MET when you push. These values are summarized in the Compendium’s winter section, which lists multiple speeds and formats (classic, skating, biathlon).

Build Your Own Estimate In Two Steps

Step 1: Pick The Closest MET

Choose from the table above. If your day mixes mellow and brisk runs, split the hour (e.g., 30 minutes at 5.3 MET and 30 minutes at 8.0 MET).

Step 2: Do The Quick Math

Convert weight to kilograms (lb ÷ 2.2). Multiply by MET and 0.0175 to get calories per minute. Multiply by active minutes. That’s it.

Weight-Based View: Two Common Scenarios

Here’s the same idea mapped to body weight for two popular styles: resort laps at a steady pace and classic Nordic cruising.

Body Weight Downhill Steady (5.3 MET) Nordic Moderate (9.0 MET)
60 kg (132 lb) ≈333 kcal/h ≈567 kcal/h
70 kg (155 lb) ≈390 kcal/h ≈662 kcal/h
80 kg (176 lb) ≈446 kcal/h ≈756 kcal/h
90 kg (198 lb) ≈502 kcal/h ≈851 kcal/h

Make Your Number More Accurate

Count Only Moving Minutes

Log sliding, poling, skating, and climbing. Exclude lines, lifts, and cocoa breaks. That keeps your estimate aligned with the MET definitions used in research.

Use Terrain Cues

Green and easy blue laps fit the low end. Long fall-line blues with short rests trend mid-range. Steep bump lines or gates are high end for downhill. Fresh tracks or rolling Nordic hills push you higher.

Check Intensity By Breath

If you can talk but not sing, you’re around moderate. If short phrases are all you can manage, you’re working hard. That “talk test” mirrors how public health groups describe intensity.

Nutrition, Hydration, And Recovery

Fuel

Bring simple carbs for quick energy, then add protein later in the day. You’ll feel better on later runs and during the drive home.

Fluids

Cold air masks thirst. Set a timer or sip at the lift. Warm drinks count toward total fluids.

Recovery

Light walking and a protein-rich meal help you bounce back fast, especially after a long Nordic session.

Why These Sources Are Trusted

The MET values used here come from the peer-reviewed Compendium of Physical Activities, which lists specific codes for downhill and cross-country speeds, including racing and skate technique. For clarity on what MET means and how intensity relates to breath and heart rate, see the CDC’s overview linked earlier. Both are stable references that coaches and clinicians use every season.

Final Tips To Dial In Your Estimate

Stack Small Wins

Plan runs with fewer bottlenecks. Keep your boots near the lift early. More moving minutes means your tally reflects the work you’re actually doing.

Match Your Day To Your Goals

If your aim is calorie burn, pick longer blue laps with short breaks or schedule a Nordic day. If the goal is skill, accept lower burn while you drill technique.

Want a structured plan after you find your hourly burn? Try our calorie deficit basics to connect ski days with weekly targets.