Lunges typically burn 3–13 calories per minute, depending on effort, body weight, and how long you keep moving.
Easy Effort
Steady Effort
Hard Effort
Basic
- Bodyweight split stance
- Slow descent, balanced knee
- Short sets, longer rest
Low Impact
Better
- Walking pattern
- Light dumbbells
- Timed intervals
Steady Output
Best
- Jump or pulse finishers
- Heavier load
- Minimal rest
High Burn
Calories Burned Doing Lunges Per Minute
Energy use from this move comes from three levers: your body weight, the effort level, and how long you keep moving. Exercise scientists use MET values to describe effort. One MET equals resting effort; values above that represent higher demand. The calorie math that trainers use is simple: calories per minute = MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200 (MET formula).
Lunges fall under calisthenics. Light sets land near 2.8–3.5 MET; hard intervals map closer to 8.0 MET, the same range seen for vigorous calisthenics in standard references like the Compendium (2024 tracking guide). That’s why two people can get very different numbers doing the same pattern.
Quick Numbers You Can Use
Below are practical estimates for 10 minutes of continuous work. “Steady” matches controlled walking or in-place sets with normal rests; “Hard” matches jump intervals or very short rests. These figures scale linearly with time, so triple them for 30 minutes.
| Body Weight | Steady (3.5 MET) | Hard (8.0 MET) |
|---|---|---|
| 60 kg (132 lb) | ≈37 kcal | ≈84 kcal |
| 75 kg (165 lb) | ≈46 kcal | ≈105 kcal |
| 90 kg (198 lb) | ≈55 kcal | ≈126 kcal |
Where These Numbers Come From
The Compendium catalogs MET values for hundreds of tasks and places calisthenics across light, moderate, and vigorous tiers. Public health guidance also frames effort bands for moderate and vigorous activity, which helps you judge how hard you’re working without lab tools (moderate and vigorous activity).
Weight, Effort, And Time: The Big 3
Heavier bodies burn more per minute at the same pace because the equation multiplies by body mass. Effort pushes the MET higher: add weight, move faster, or choose jump variations to raise demand. Time compounds everything; even a modest MET adds up when you stack minutes.
Calorie burn sits inside your daily energy picture. If fat loss is the goal, pair your sessions with smart food portions and a clear view of your daily calorie intake. That way training and nutrition point in the same direction.
Technique First: Form That Saves Knees And Boosts Output
Good form lets you hit more minutes with less wobble. Stand tall, take a comfortable step, and lower until the front thigh trends parallel to the floor while the back knee hovers above the ground. Keep the front heel planted, torso stacked over the hips, and both knees tracking over the middle toes. Drive up through the front heel and switch sides without rushing.
Common Form Fixes
- Knee cave: press the big toe and heel; picture the shin as a sliding elevator, not a swinging door.
- Short stride: step far enough that the back hip can drop; cramped steps load the front knee.
- Forward lean: ribs over pelvis; think “zip up” through the midline to keep the spine tall.
Progressions, Variations, And What They Mean For Burn
Small tweaks shift the MET. The list below moves from easier patterns to options that amplify demand. Pick the version that matches your current strength and balance, then nudge the challenge.
Lower Demand Options
- Assisted split squat: hold a rail or rack; slow reps, longer rests.
- Reverse lunge: step back instead of forward; balance improves for many lifters.
- Shorter sets: 20–30 seconds on, 30–40 seconds off.
Medium Demand Options
- Walking pattern: continuous steps across the floor.
- Goblet load: hold a single dumbbell or kettlebell at the chest.
- Tempo work: 3-second descents, quick up, brief pause at the top.
High Demand Options
- Jump lunge: switch legs in the air; keep landings soft.
- Split-squat pulses: finish each set with fast half reps.
- Complexes: string lunges with squats or step-ups; limited rest.
| Lunge Style | MET (Ref) | Kcal/Min (Estimate) |
|---|---|---|
| Walking Lunges | ≈3.5 (calisthenics, steady) | ≈4.6 |
| Reverse Lunges | ≈3.5 (calisthenics, steady) | ≈4.6 |
| Jump Lunges | ≈8.0 (vigorous calisthenics) | ≈10.5 |
Programming That Matches Your Goal
If You Want A Cardio Bump
Use time-based intervals and keep rests short. Try 6–10 rounds of 40 seconds on, 20 seconds off. Stay at a pace where you can talk in short phrases. Rotate sides continuously or use walking reps to keep the heart rate up.
If You Want Strength And Shape
Use slower reps and add load. Run 3–5 sets of 8–12 reps per leg with 60–90 seconds between sets. Keep each rep smooth, lock in the heel, and drive tall through the finish.
If You Want Pure Efficiency
Pair lunges with an upper-body move and limit rest: push-up × 10, walking lunge × 20 total steps, rest 30–45 seconds. Repeat 6–8 rounds. This bumps the MET without feeling chaotic.
Sample 20-Minute Lunge Session
This session blends steady and hard work so you can rack up minutes without losing form. Warm up first with hip openers and two easy sets of 10 alternating steps.
Block A — 8 Minutes
- Walking lunges × 40 seconds
- Rest × 20 seconds
- Reverse lunges × 40 seconds
- Rest × 20 seconds
- Repeat the pair twice
Block B — 8 Minutes
- Jump lunges × 20 seconds
- Bodyweight split squat × 20 seconds
- Rest × 20 seconds
- Repeat four times
Finisher — 4 Minutes
- Goblet walking lunges × 30 seconds
- Rest × 30 seconds
- Repeat four times
If you prefer a gentler plan, extend the rests and skip the jumps. The calorie math scales with pace and time either way.
How This Compares To Other Moves
Harvard’s reference tables place steady calisthenics around the middle of the pack for energy cost and vigorous body-weight work near the top tiers for gym time. That means lunges can match brisk cardio when you string sets with short rests (Harvard calorie chart).
Safety, Warm-Up, And Recovery
Open the hips and ankles before you start; think leg swings, calf raises, and two easy sets of split squats. Use shoes with a stable base, or go barefoot on a safe surface if balance is solid. Keep reps crisp. Stop the set when form fades rather than chasing a number. If any joint feels cranky, switch to reverse steps or shorten the range for a while. Cool down with gentle quad and hip-flexor stretches.
Tracking: Reps, Time, Or Distance?
Time is the easiest way to track effort and match the MET idea. Set a timer and count total quality steps inside each block. Distance works well for walking patterns in a hallway or field. Reps per leg is fine for loaded sets. Pick one measure for a training block so you can see clean progress.
Small Tweaks That Raise Burn Fast
- Shorten rest: slide from 45 seconds down to 25–30 seconds across a month.
- Add load: start with a 5–10 kg dumbbell held at the chest; keep posture tall.
- Change tempo: try 3 seconds down, 1 second up to raise time under tension.
- Use finishers: end with 20 seconds of jump lunges or fast split-squat pulses.
Why The Same Session Feels Different Week To Week
Sleep, stress, hydration, and the rest of your training week shift how hard a session feels. Let breathing be your governor. If you can only speak one or two words, you’re in a hard zone. If you can speak in short phrases, you’re in a steady zone. If you can chat in full sentences, back off if your plan calls for higher output today. This simple talk test lines up with common intensity bands used in public health guidance.
Answers To Common “But How Many?” Moments
How Many Minutes Do I Need?
For general fitness, aim for 10–20 minutes of lunge work inside a broader session two or three times per week. Mix in other patterns so your knees, hips, and back get different angles across the week.
Do Heavier Weights Always Mean More Calories?
Yes, load can raise the MET, but only if you keep the set moving. If heavy sets force long rests, total burn across the hour can even out. That’s why a fast body-weight circuit can rival slow heavy sets for energy use.
Do Step-Ups Or Squats Burn More?
It depends on pace and time. With similar effort bands, the totals sit close. Many lifters find step-ups easier on the knees, which can help them rack up more minutes and match or beat lunge totals.
Quick Wrap-Up
The move scales from an easy warm-up to a lung-burning finisher. Use steady sets when form is the goal and jump or complex work when you want a bigger energy push. Pair that plan with meals that match your intent. If you want a complete walkthrough, try our calorie deficit guide.