Most people burn 180–300 calories per hour of hot yoga, with size, pace, and sequence driving the range.
Per-Minute Burn
One-Hour Total
90-Minute Total
Gentle Heat (Basics)
- Slower flow; more holds
- Lower heart rate
- Great for form and breath
Lower burn
Standard 60 Minutes
- Classic heated sequence
- Short water breaks
- Moderate heart rate
Mid burn
Full 90 Minutes
- Complete Bikram set
- Higher heat load
- Steady breathing focus
Higher total
What That Hour In A Heated Studio Really Burns
Energy burn in a warm room feels huge. Sweat pours, breath gets heavier, and the clock moves fast. The catch: metabolic output tracks movement and muscle work more than the thermostat. Lab data on a full 90-minute Bikram class shows about 330 calories for women and 460 for men across the entire session; per minute, that’s roughly 3–5 calories. Over sixty minutes, the typical total lands near 180–300 calories. Those numbers line up with moderate-to-strong yoga flows measured outside the heat.
That range assumes steady effort, normal breaks, and a taught sequence. Faster vinyasa chains, extra chaturangas, or long balance holds can nudge the figure up. Long water pauses or extended savasana pull it down.
Calories Burned In One Hour Of Heated Yoga—By Body Size
Here’s a quick, broad snapshot that blends lab findings on Bikram with established tables for yoga styles. Use it as a ballpark, not an exact readout.
| Class Style (60 min) | ~125 lb (57 kg) | ~185 lb (84 kg) |
|---|---|---|
| Hatha (Gentle) | 240 kcal | 336 kcal |
| Vinyasa/Power | 360 kcal | 504 kcal |
| Hot (Bikram pace) | ~220 kcal | ~307 kcal |
The gentle row doubles the 30-minute values often cited for Hatha classes. The flowing row reflects stronger sequences that raise heart rate. The heated row uses the Colorado State averages scaled to one hour, which match a moderate flow in feel and effort. For a full overview of pose-based energy math, you’ll get better targets once you set your daily calorie needs.
Why Heat Feels Harder Than The Numbers
Warm, humid air slows sweat evaporation, so you keep more heat. That drives a higher heart rate for the same movement. Perceived effort climbs, yet total metabolic work can stay moderate. This explains why a heated class can feel grueling while posting calorie totals closer to brisk walking. The CDC’s intensity guide uses a talk test: if you can talk but not sing, you’re near moderate; if single words only, that’s vigorous. Most hot sessions sit in the middle for many adults.
How To Personalize Your One-Hour Estimate
Use A Simple MET Approach
Think of METs as “how many times above resting.” Gentle yoga averages near 2.5 METs, power flows around 4 METs in published tables. Heated sets can sit in that 3–4 band because the poses, not the thermostat, do most of the work. The Compendium of Physical Activities lists MET values that plug into calories per minute: Calories = MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200. A 70-kg person at 3.5 METs lands near 4.3 kcal per minute, or ~260 per hour.
Match Class Type To Your Goal
Seeking a higher hourly total? Choose flowing sequences with more push-ups, planks, and transitions. Chasing flexibility and calm? A slower heated set still adds mobility work with a moderate burn. Both win, just with different energy signatures.
Mind The Heat Load
Warm rooms stress the cooling system. Sweat rate rises, and core temperature can creep up. The ACSM brief on hot exercise and the CDC’s heat page for athletes both point to hydration and early symptom checks. If you feel dizzy or stop sweating, step out and cool down.
Minute-By-Minute: What Drives The Count
Pose Selection
Repeated chaturangas, chair holds, and long warrior chains build steady output. Restorative shapes drop it. Mix matters more than the thermostat number on the wall.
Breathing And Pace
Smooth inhales and exhales steady the heart rate. Rapid shifts raise peaks but can also force longer breaks. A metered pace often yields a higher total by keeping you moving.
Breaks And Water
Short sips keep you in the flow. Long pauses cut total work time and shrink the hour’s tally.
Convert The 90-Minute Lab Data To Your 60-Minute Class
Colorado State’s research measured full Bikram sequences at room temps near 105°F, with humidity around 40%. Average totals came out near 330 calories for women and 460 for men over 90 minutes. On a per-minute basis, that’s 3.7–5.1. A typical sixty-minute class at the same pace lands near 220–300 calories. Those figures assume similar sequencing and minimal idle time between poses. You’ll drift higher with vigorous flows and extra upper-body work.
Calorie Burn Factors You Can Tweak
| Variable | Effect On Burn | Practical Tweak |
|---|---|---|
| Sequence Strength | More push-pull work raises per-minute output | Add chaturanga sets or longer plank holds |
| Class Pace | Fewer long pauses add total moving time | Shorten water breaks; keep transitions crisp |
| Heat/Humidity | Feels harder; heart rate climbs for same work | Hydrate, use near-mat airflow, step out if dizzy |
Smart Hydration And Safety In The Heat
Arrive well-hydrated. Sip during breaks. Use electrolytes if you sweat heavily or attend back-to-back classes. Watch for warning signs: cramps, light-headedness, chills, pounding heartbeat, or confusion. If any of these pop up, stop and cool down. The CDC’s guidance for athletes in heat gives the same cues used on the field and fits studio work too.
Sample One-Hour Heated Class And Estimated Burn
Warm-Up (10 Minutes)
Breath work, gentle bends, and easier balances. Expect ~30–40 calories here for a mid-size adult. The goal is tissue prep, not chasing a big number.
Work Block (40 Minutes)
Sun salutations with extra chaturanga reps, chair variations, lunges, and standing balances. Add side planks or crow attempts to raise output. This chunk often delivers 120–200 calories, depending on pace and rest.
Cool-Down (10 Minutes)
Hip openers, hamstring work, twists, then savasana. Another 20–40 calories. Leave the room steady and clear-headed.
Realistic Outcomes Over A Week
Two to three heated sessions each week can deliver mobility, balance, and strength gains, with a modest calorie contribution. If body-weight change is the aim, pair classes with steps, protein-forward meals, and a small energy gap made through food choices. The Harvard chart for movement types shows how walking, cycling, or rowing can add to the weekly total in a predictable way, while yoga covers strength and range.
Frequently Misunderstood Points
“Heat Alone Melts More Calories”
It doesn’t. Heat can raise heart rate for the same movement, yet the total burn sticks near moderate unless the sequence demands more work. The feeling of strain comes from thermal stress, not a massive jump in metabolic output.
“Sweat Equals Fat Loss”
Sweat marks water loss and cooling. Rehydrate and the scale swings back. Long-term change comes from steady training and a manageable energy gap, not from towels soaked after class.
How To Estimate Your Own Number
Step 1: Pick A MET
Choose 3.0–3.5 for a steady heated class and 4.0 for a stronger flow. These values align with published compendium bands for yoga styles.
Step 2: Do The Math
Calories per minute = MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200. Multiply by 60 for the hour. A 70-kg person at 3.5 METs lands near 245 calories for a measured, steady hour.
Step 3: Adjust For Your Session
Add 10–20% if your teacher strings fast transitions with extra upper-body work. Subtract 10–20% if you pause often or skip tougher shapes.
Evidence Corner
The calorie counts in this guide draw from two trusted places. First, a university lab tracked full heated sequences and published the averages for a 90-minute set. Second, a medical school table lists thirty-minute burns across body sizes for many activities, including yoga variants. Cross-checking both gives a sensible hour-long range that fits how classes feel in the room.
Bottom Line And Next Steps
Hot classes deliver a moderate burn with big perks for mobility, balance, and steady strength. If you want more total energy use, blend heated sessions with brisk walks or rides. If you want clearer nutrition targets, you can tune intake with a small, steady gap day by day. Want a step-by-step plan to shape that gap? Try our calorie deficit guide.
References used in this article include the Colorado State study on Bikram classes, the Harvard calorie table, the Compendium of Physical Activities, and guidance from the CDC on exercising in heat.