On-bike calorie burn ranges ~240–840 per hour based on rider weight, pace, and terrain.
Intensity
Intensity
Intensity
Basic Ride
- 20–40 min easy spin
- Flat route or level trainer
- Conversational pace
Recovery
Better Ride
- 45–60 min endurance
- 2–3 short hill pulls
- Steady fueling
Aerobic
Best Ride
- 45–60 min tempo/VO2 blocks
- Warm-up & cooldown
- Group draft skills
High Output
You came here to size up ride energy use without guesswork. The fastest way is to match your pace to a standard MET value and run the simple formula below. MET stands for metabolic equivalent and lets us compare effort across bodies and bikes.
Calories Burned Cycling Per Hour: What Affects It
On the road or trainer, burn depends on four pillars: your mass, how fast you move the pedals, the resistance you push against, and the total time. Wind, gradients, surface, and drafting all nudge the number up or down.
Your Body Weight
Heavier riders expend more energy at the same MET, because the equation multiplies by body mass. Two riders side by side can show very different totals even at the same speed.
Speed And Terrain
Speed ties to MET in the activity tables. Leisure spins under 10 mph sit around 4.0 MET. Hit 12–13.9 mph and you’re near 8.0 MET. Push 16–19 mph and you’re in the 12.0 MET range. Steep grades, headwinds, and stop-and-go traffic increase demand.
Aerodynamics And Rolling
Drag rises roughly with the square of speed, so a small jump in pace asks for a lot more power. Narrower tires at the right pressure reduce rolling resistance. A lower torso and tucked elbows trim frontal area and shave energy cost at any given speed.
Bike Type And Position
Upright city frames catch more air than drops on a road setup. Wider tires on gravel roll slower than slicks. Even hand placement changes frontal area, which shifts drag and energy cost.
Indoors Vs Outdoors
Stationary watt levels map to MET bands. Around 90–100 watts ranks near 6.0 MET, 126–150 watts closer to 8.0, while 151–199 watts sits around 10.3. Spin classes combine surges with seated recovery that average into the final total.
Reference METs For Common Riding Speeds
Use this quick table to pick a MET that matches your ride. These values follow the Adult Compendium and help anchor realistic estimates.
| Pace Or Setting | MET | What It Looks Like |
|---|---|---|
| < 10 mph, easy | 4.0 | City paths, recovery spin |
| 10–11.9 mph | 6.8 | Leisure with mild hills |
| 12–13.9 mph | 8.0 | Endurance pace on flats |
| 14–15.9 mph | 10.0 | Brisk group pace |
| 16–19 mph | 12.0 | Fast solo or drafting |
| > 20 mph | 16.8 | Race-level effort |
| Stationary 90–100 W | 6.0 | Light-moderate spin |
| Stationary 126–150 W | 8.0 | Steady endurance |
| Stationary 151–199 W | 10.3 | Strong sustained work |
| Spin bike class (avg) | 9.0 | Intervals + recoveries |
Want your daily picture, not just ride time? A good place to start is your daily energy burn, then layer planned cycling on top.
Quick Formula To Estimate Your Ride Calories
The standard equation uses MET to scale by body mass and duration:
Calories ≈ MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200 × minutes.
Here are clean, realistic examples based on the table above.
Example: 60-Minute Easy Spin
Rider: 70 kg (154 lb). Effort: 4.0 MET (easy pace). Minutes: 60. Math: 4.0 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 × 60 ≈ 294 kcal.
Example: 60-Minute Endurance Pace
Rider: 75 kg (165 lb). Effort: 8.0 MET (12–13.9 mph). Minutes: 60. Math: 8.0 × 3.5 × 75 ÷ 200 × 60 ≈ 630 kcal.
Example: 45-Minute Fast Group Ride
Rider: 85 kg (187 lb). Effort: 12.0 MET (16–19 mph). Minutes: 45. Math: 12.0 × 3.5 × 85 ÷ 200 × 45 ≈ 803 kcal.
MET is a standard term in exercise science: one MET equals 1 kcal/kg/hour and roughly 3.5 ml O2/kg/min; moderate activity runs 3–5.9 MET and vigorous is 6.0 MET or higher (Compendium METs, CDC intensity levels).
Stationary Bike Calories Versus Road Rides
Indoor setups remove wind and coasting, so the workload comes from resistance and cadence. Many consoles estimate energy from watts. Outdoors, speed over ground adds air resistance, hills, and drafting, which makes two 200-watt riders burn similar calories even if one is riding faster in a tailwind.
How Smart Trainers And Bikes Estimate
Smart trainers measure power at the hub or cassette. Apps then convert watts to energy. The conversion from mechanical work to human energy cost isn’t 1:1 due to efficiency, so expect slight gaps against heart-rate-based estimates.
Why Heart-Rate Readings Vary
Caffeine, heat, and hydration change pulse at a given output. A fan and a bottle can bring readings closer to your real workload and give steadier calorie numbers.
E-Bikes And Assistance
With high electronic support, the effort can drop near 4.0 MET; light assist sits around 6.0 MET. Turn support down if your goal is higher energy use while keeping speed fun.
Ways To Burn More While Staying Smart
Small tweaks lift totals without wrecking your legs:
- Add time first. Extend the cool-down by 5–10 minutes.
- Bump cadence by 3–5 rpm at the same gear to raise oxygen use slightly.
- Use rolling routes or short tempo blocks to add load while keeping control.
- Ride with a group that sits just above your solo pace for steady pressure.
- Fuel early on rides over an hour so fatigue doesn’t drop output.
Thirty, Forty-Five, And Ninety-Minute Snapshots
Need quick planning cues? Here are handy ranges for a 70-kg rider. A half hour at 4.0 MET lands near 145 kcal. The same time at 8.0 MET is near 290 kcal. Push to 12.0 MET for 30 minutes and you’ll see about 435 kcal.
At 45 minutes that same rider lands near 220, 435, and 655 kcal for those three effort bands. Stretch to 90 minutes and the totals reach about 435, 870, and 1,305 kcal. Your numbers shift up or down with weight and the exact MET you select.
Sample Calorie Estimates By Weight And Pace
Pick your weight range and scan two common intensities. Numbers use the same MET math as above and round to the nearest 5 kcal for clean planning.
| Body Weight | Easy Ride 8–10 mph | Vigorous Ride 14–16 mph |
|---|---|---|
| 55 kg (121 lb) | ~230 kcal / hr | ~575 kcal / hr |
| 65 kg (143 lb) | ~270 kcal / hr | ~680 kcal / hr |
| 75 kg (165 lb) | ~310 kcal / hr | ~785 kcal / hr |
| 85 kg (187 lb) | ~350 kcal / hr | ~890 kcal / hr |
| 95 kg (209 lb) | ~390 kcal / hr | ~995 kcal / hr |
Mistakes That Skew Calorie Readings
Using A Mismatched MET
Grabbing 12.0 MET for a relaxed café spin inflates totals. Pick the row that fits your real pace, route, and traffic stops.
Wrong Body Weight In Apps
Many bike computers keep an old profile weight. Update it, because the equation multiplies by kilograms directly.
Ignoring Stop Time
Commutes and city loops have lights. Subtract the parked minutes or pause the device so your math lines up with moving time.
Comparing Across Devices
Two platforms can disagree by 5–15%. What matters is a stable method across rides so trends make sense.
Practical Planning Tips
Pick a goal for the session—easy recovery, aerobic time, or power work—and choose an intensity band that fits. If weight change is on your radar, pair rides with a steady eating plan. A helpful companion page is this short primer on calorie deficit guide you can skim after your ride.
Ride safe, hydrate, and enjoy the miles. A simple log that tracks minutes, pace band, and calories will tell a clear story over weeks.