Cross-country skiing typically burns ~350–1,150 calories per hour, driven by pace, technique, terrain, and body weight.
Easy Pace
Moderate Pace
Vigorous Pace
Basic Track
- Classic stride
- Flat or gentle rollers
- Short sessions
Low Stress
Better Mix
- Classic with hills
- Longer loops
- Dialed-in wax
Balanced Burn
Best Effort
- Skate technique
- Intervals or long climbs
- Race-style pacing
High Output
Calories Burned While Cross-Country Skiing By Intensity
Energy use rises fast when you add hills, speed, or switch to a skating stride. Researchers group effort with MET values (metabolic equivalents). You can estimate calories per minute from METs with a simple equation: calories/min = MET × 3.5 × body-weight(kg) ÷ 200.
Quick Math You Can Use
Here’s a broad view for common paces using published MET levels for track skiing. Numbers below show calories for 30 minutes at two body weights.
| Effort & MET | 60 kg (132 lb) | 75 kg (165 lb) |
|---|---|---|
| Easy shuffle — 6.8 MET | ~215 kcal | ~270 kcal |
| Steady pace — 9.0 MET | ~285 kcal | ~355 kcal |
| Brisk, hillier — 12.5 MET | ~395 kcal | ~495 kcal |
Once you mix regular snow time into your week, the benefits of exercise stack up: stronger legs and core, better aerobic capacity, and steadier energy across long winter days.
Why Technique And Terrain Change The Burn
Classic skiing moves straight ahead in set tracks. Skating uses a V-shaped push and bigger muscle groups, so oxygen use climbs. Trail pitch and glide quality also swing the numbers. Soft snow, gusty wind, or slow bases increase resistance and your hourly total… even if speed looks modest.
What The Research Lists For Skiing
Standard references list multiple MET bands for this sport. Classic at a gentle pace sits near 6.8 MET. A steady track glide lands around 9.0 MET. Brisk track work reaches about 12.5 MET. Skating technique trends higher (≈13.3 MET), and race-style climbs can reach 15.5 MET or more. These bands come from the widely cited activity tables used by coaches and clinicians.
How To Estimate Your Own Session
Use three inputs: body weight, effort, and time. Pick the MET that best matches your day, then run the math with the equation above. Many skiers track perceived effort (breathing, ability to chat), heart rate, and lap times on familiar loops to choose the right MET band.
Sample Walk-Through
Say you weigh 70 kg and ski a rolling loop at a steady clip. That’s roughly 9.0 MET. Calories per minute ≈ 9.0 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 = ~11.0 kcal/min. Over one hour, that’s about 660 kcal. A skating workout with long climbs might use 13–16 MET, pushing your hourly total toward the four-figure mark.
Classic Vs. Skate: When Each Makes Sense
Classic shines for endurance days, easier snow, and long tracks with consistent glide. Skate style suits firm, groomed trails and athletes who like higher power output. If you’re new, build a base with classic first. When your balance and timing feel smooth, sample short skate intervals to taste the higher burn without overloading your hips.
Gear And Snow Factors That Matter
- Ski length and stiffness: A ski that matches your weight glides cleaner, cutting waste.
- Wax and base prep: Grip wax that’s too sticky drags; too slick makes you slip on climbs.
- Trail grooming: Fresh corduroy and set tracks reduce micro-stumbles and help cadence.
- Clothing: Light, breathable layers keep you warm without heat-soak that slows pace.
Calories By Technique And Conditions
Here’s a second view using a 70-kg skier. These pair the published MET values with the same equation so you can scan likely ranges for your loop type.
| Style / Conditions | MET | kcal Per Hour |
|---|---|---|
| Classic, flat track | 6.8 | ~430 |
| Classic, rolling loop | 9.0 | ~570 |
| Classic, brisk hills | 12.5 | ~790 |
| Skate, firm snow | 13.3 | ~980 |
| Race-style climbs | 15.5 | ~1,140 |
How To Nudge The Numbers Up Or Down
Add Burn Safely
- Include climbs: Pick loops with steady uphill sections, not just flats.
- Use short pickups: Add 4–6 × 2-minute faster glides with full recovery.
- Try a skate block: One segment of V1/V2 work spices up a classic day.
Dial It Back
- Smooth cadence: Shorten stride and stay under your breathing “red line.”
- Pick faster snow: Freshly groomed tracks with crisp temps glide easier.
- Shorten the loop: Keep laps tight so you can stop early if hands or toes chill.
What Counts As Moderate Or Vigorous Here
Moderate track work feels like steady conversation with short pauses—breathing is deeper but under control. Vigorous skiing sounds like shorter phrases with a clear rise in heart rate. In research tables, moderate often lines up near 6–9 MET, while vigorous starts above that and can push into the teens for long climbs or skating sprints.
How Reliable Are These Estimates
They’re solid for planning and for comparing workouts over time. That said, no chart knows your snow texture, wind, technique, or recovery. If you wear a heart-rate strap and pair it with speed or GPS, you’ll see your own trendlines settle after a few sessions on the same loop.
Trusted References Used For The Numbers
MET values and the formula here trace to established resources used in clinics and labs. You can skim the official activity tables for winter sports and the definition that one MET equals 3.5 ml/kg/min, then plug your stats into the equation shared above. For a sanity check, scan the widely cited calories-per-30-minutes table from Harvard’s health site for ballpark comparisons across sports.
Build A Week That Feels Good
Two steady track sessions bookended by one shorter skills day works for many skiers. Toss in light strength for hips and glutes, and you’ll float over rough patches when the trail turns choppy. When spring slush arrives, slide over to hiking or cycling and keep the base intact.
Where To Go Next
Want a complete weight-management primer that pairs well with winter workouts? Try our calorie deficit guide for planning and meal math.