Ironing clothes burns roughly 55–85 calories in 30 minutes for most adults, depending on body weight and pace.
Difficulty
Time Per Shirt
Energy Burn (30 min)
Quick Touch-Ups
- Wrinkle release on tees
- Short bursts of steam
- Minimal board setup
Fast
Full Press Session
- Collars, cuffs, pleats
- Stable stance rotation
- Mix standing and steps
Balanced
Batch & Stack
- Sort by fabric first
- Alternate sleeves/body
- Add carry/put-away laps
Higher Burn
Calories Burned While Ironing Clothes (By Weight)
Energy use during this task comes from light upper-body work, small steps, and standing. The Compendium of Physical Activities classifies ironing as a 1.8 MET task, which is light intensity for most adults. One MET is resting energy use; 1.8 MET means about 1.8 times resting metabolic rate while you work.
Quick Estimate Table
The chart below uses the standard MET equation to estimate energy use across common body weights. It shows totals for 30 and 60 minutes at 1.8 MET.
| Body Weight (kg) | Calories In 30 Min | Calories In 60 Min |
|---|---|---|
| 50 | 47 | 94 |
| 60 | 57 | 113 |
| 70 | 66 | 132 |
| 80 | 76 | 151 |
| 90 | 85 | 170 |
These figures sit inside your wider energy budget from resting processes and daily movement—the baseline of calories burned every day.
How The Numbers Are Calculated
Researchers estimate energy use with metabolic equivalents (METs). The equation many exercise texts use is: calories per minute = MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200. It’s a field-tested shortcut that tracks well for light household work.
If you weigh 70 kg and you press for 30 minutes at 1.8 MET, the math is: 1.8 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 × 30 ≈ 66 kcal. That matches the table above. You’ll land a little higher or lower based on cadence, stepping, and how many times you reposition items.
If you like a reference on the math, see a plain-language explainer of the MET formula. For intensity context, the Compendium lists ironing at 1.8 MET under home activities.
What Changes Calorie Burn While You Press
Body Weight And Height
Heavier bodies use more energy for the same task. Taller users also take slightly longer reaches, which can nudge totals during a long session.
Setup And Posture
A board set near hip level keeps wrists neutral and reduces wasted effort. A low board makes you bend and slows the pace; a board that’s too high limits reach. A stable stance with gentle weight shifts helps you keep a rhythm without shrugging the shoulders.
Fabric And Steam
Heavier cottons demand more passes. Synthetics finish faster on lower heat. Steam output trims time per piece, which changes totals per hour if you breeze through a pile.
Movement Between Items
Short walks to hang shirts or to swap loads add steps. A few seconds of walking per item sounds small, but over 20–30 garments it adds up.
Is Pressing Clothes Good Exercise?
It counts as light movement. You stand, reach, and step. Light tasks like this can help you sit less and keep joints moving. Pairing it with moderate activities during the week lines up with the Physical Activity Guidelines.
How Ironing Compares With Similar Chores
Here’s a side-by-side using Compendium MET values. Calories are estimated for a 70 kg adult over 30 minutes with the standard equation.
| Task (MET) | MET Value | Calories In 30 Min (70 kg) |
|---|---|---|
| Ironing | 1.8 | 66 |
| Washing Dishes (standing) | 2.0 | 74 |
| Vacuuming (moderate) | 3.0 | 110 |
Ways To Nudge The Burn Without Strain
Batch Tasks And Add Steps
Sort items by fabric so heat settings stay stable. After each piece, take a 10–20 second lap to hang or fold. Those small walking breaks raise totals across the hour and keep your back fresh.
Use A Rhythm, Not Force
Press, lift, glide—no hard pushes. Steam handles the heavy lifting; your job is smooth motion. Gentle weight shifts at the feet keep the upper body relaxed.
Alternate Hands For Reaches
Swap the board angle so both sides of the body share the work. This keeps shoulder fatigue down during long runs.
Stack With Micro-Exercises
Between shirts, add 6–8 heel raises or two deep breaths with tall posture. No need to break flow. These tiny add-ons help, especially if you iron often.
Safety And Comfort Tips
Heat And Steam
Keep the iron base off the skin and away from cords. Use a dry area for parking the hot soleplate. A simple pressing cloth protects delicate fabrics and reduces redo time.
Back And Wrist Care
Set the board near hip level. Keep wrists in line with forearms rather than cocked up. If you sit, use a chair that lets you reach the board without rounding the back.
Sample 30-Minute Pressing Plan
Minute 0–5: Setup And Warm Start
Set the board at hip height. Sort by fabric. Do 10 slow heel raises. Start with tees to find your pace.
Minute 5–20: Steady Flow
Work in pairs: one sleeve-forward item and one flat-front item. After each piece, take 10–15 steps to hang or fold.
Minute 20–30: Finish And Put Away
Lower heat for synthetics. Do a final lap to hang items. Wipe moisture from the board and unplug the iron.
Method And Sources
Energy estimates use a 1.8 MET value for ironing listed in the Compendium’s home activity table. The calorie math uses a widely cited MET equation (calories per minute = MET × 3.5 × body weight in kg ÷ 200), which is a common approach in exercise texts. Charts above apply that method across body weights and time blocks.
When To Choose A Different Chore
If you want a bigger calorie hit in the same time, pick a moderate task like vacuuming or a brisk walk. Save pressing for light-day movement or pair it with a short walk before dinner.
Practical Takeaways
Use Pressing As Light Movement
Stand tall, move smoothly, and turn it into a steady half hour on your feet. That helps on days when workouts don’t fit.
Match Expectations To The Task
The burn is modest on its own. The big win is less sitting and an easy chance to add steps while getting chores done.
Want a longer strategy to use chore time toward weight goals? Try our calorie deficit guide.