Three hours of cycling burns ~1,260–3,360 calories depending on pace (6–16 MET) and body weight.
Effort
Effort
Effort
Easy Spin
- Steady cadence, low gears
- Flat or light rolling
- Short stops as needed
6–8 MET
Steady Ride
- Tempo effort, limited stops
- Mixed terrain, small climbs
- Fluids every 15–20 min
8–12 MET
Hard Session
- Faster pace or long climbs
- Group pulls or intervals
- Fuel plan on schedule
12–16+ MET
Why Three Hours On The Bike Burns So Much
Cycling taps large muscles for a long time, so energy adds up. The simplest way to estimate your burn is the MET method: multiply the activity’s MET rating by your body weight in kilograms and by hours spent riding. For a mid-pace road ride ranked around 8–10 MET, that math stacks up fast over three hours.
MET ratings come from lab and field data that match speed, resistance, and posture to typical energy cost. Road speed bands commonly used by coaches and databases range from 10–11.9 mph for a light spin to 16–19 mph for race-like work, with METs stepping from 6–8 up to 12–14 and beyond. The cycling MET values page lists these bands along with indoor wattage tiers and e-bike entries based on support level.
Table 1 — Pace To METs To 3-Hour Energy (70 kg rider)
This quick table keeps it simple: match your usual pace to a MET band, then read the approximate burn for a 70 kg (154 lb) rider over three hours.
| Pace Band (Flat/Rolling) | MET | 3-Hour Calories (70 kg) |
|---|---|---|
| 10–11.9 mph (easy spin) | 6–8 | 1,260–1,680 |
| 12–13.9 mph (steady) | 8–10 | 1,680–2,100 |
| 14–15.9 mph (fast) | 10–12 | 2,100–2,520 |
| 16–19 mph (hard) | 12–14 | 2,520–2,940 |
| >20 mph (very hard) | 16+ | 3,360+ |
Dialing food and drink for a long ride is easier once you’ve set your daily calorie needs, since your on-bike intake slots into that bigger picture.
How To Estimate Your 3-Hour Burn
Here’s a clear, repeatable process you can reuse for any ride.
Step 1 — Pick A MET That Matches Your Pace
Use the Compendium bands as a cue: 10–11.9 mph ≈ 6–8 MET; 12–13.9 mph ≈ 8–10 MET; 14–15.9 mph ≈ 10–12 MET; 16–19 mph ≈ 12–14 MET; >20 mph ≈ 16+. For indoor bikes, you can also pick by power output, since the Compendium lists watt tiers with METs. Source: Compendium: cycling MET values.
Step 2 — Convert Your Weight To Kilograms
Divide pounds by 2.2. So 154 lb ≈ 70 kg; 176 lb ≈ 80 kg; 198 lb ≈ 90 kg.
Step 3 — Multiply: MET × kg × hours
That’s the standard energy estimate based on the MET definition (1 MET ≈ 1 kcal/kg/hour). The CDC explains intensity basics and the talk test to sanity-check your chosen effort band: see CDC: measuring intensity.
Worked Examples
- Steady road spin (8 MET), 70 kg, three hours: 8 × 70 × 3 = 1,680 kcal.
- Tempo ride (10 MET), 80 kg, three hours: 10 × 80 × 3 = 2,400 kcal.
- Climby group day (12 MET), 90 kg, three hours: 12 × 90 × 3 = 3,240 kcal.
- Fast paceline (14 MET), 70 kg, three hours: 14 × 70 × 3 = 2,940 kcal.
Calories Burned In 3 Hours Of Cycling (By Pace & Weight)
Speed isn’t the only variable. Two riders at the same pace can differ by hundreds of calories because body mass changes the math. Use these quick ranges to plan fuel and recovery.
Light Spin — Flat Route Or Tailwind
Expect roughly 6–8 MET. Lighter riders land near the lower edge; heavier riders see larger totals. Gentle terrain and steady cadence lower spikes in energy cost.
Tempo Day — Mixed Terrain
Expect 8–12 MET as climbs and false flats raise demand. Short stops at lights barely dent total energy over three hours unless you idle often.
Hard Session — Hills, Pulls, Or Intervals
Expect 12–16+ MET. Long climbs, rough surfaces, or repeated surges push the number up. Drafting lowers the load when you sit in, while taking long pulls raises it.
Table 2 — Body Weight vs. Burn (3 Hours)
Pick a pace band, then read across. These examples use two common effort tiers from road riding.
| Body Weight | Moderate Pace (~8 MET) | Fast Pace (~12 MET) |
|---|---|---|
| 60 kg (132 lb) | 1,440 kcal | 2,160 kcal |
| 70 kg (154 lb) | 1,680 kcal | 2,520 kcal |
| 80 kg (176 lb) | 1,920 kcal | 2,880 kcal |
| 90 kg (198 lb) | 2,160 kcal | 3,240 kcal |
What Moves The Number Up Or Down
Terrain, Stops, And Wind
Climbs raise METs; long downhills and tailwinds do the opposite. City routes lower the total when you wait at lights or soft-pedal through turns. Rural loops with steady motion rack up more minutes at your chosen effort.
Position, Clothing, And Bike Fit
Aero hoods or drops cut drag, which lowers the watts needed for the same road speed. Loose layers catch wind. A smooth chain and inflated tires save energy. Small tweaks add up over three hours.
Drafting And Group Dynamics
Sitting in a fast group trims cost; taking repeated pulls raises it. If you’re mostly sheltered, use the lower edge of the MET range for that speed; if you lead often, use the upper edge.
Surface And Rolling Resistance
Fresh asphalt needs fewer watts than chip-seal or gravel. Wider tires at the right pressure can help on rough lanes. Off-road routes drift toward higher METs even at modest speeds.
Indoor vs. Outdoor
On a gym bike, you can use power tiers that map to METs. The Compendium lists 126–150 W ≈ 8 MET, 151–199 W ≈ ~10 MET, and 230–250 W ≈ ~12.5 MET, among other brackets. That lets you estimate energy for a long class with the same formula. Source: Compendium: cycling MET values.
Fueling A Three-Hour Ride
Long rides pull from both glycogen and fat. You’ll feel better—and finish stronger—if you match intake to effort. A simple plan is 30–60 g of carbs per hour on steady rides, nudging toward 60–90 g during hard sessions if your gut is trained for it. Fluids every 10–20 minutes help manage sweat loss. Aim for foods you tolerate on the bike: mix a bottle with carbs and electrolytes, and keep small gels or chews handy.
Don’t chase every calorie during the ride. You can refuel after with a balanced plate that includes protein, carbs, and fluids. If weight loss is the goal, you might bring in slightly less than you spent, but keep recovery reasonable so tomorrow’s session doesn’t suffer.
Pacing Tips For A Better Day Out
Pick An Effort You Can Hold
The talk test is a handy cue: steady rides allow short sentences, while hard efforts cut speech to a few words. See the CDC’s guide to the talk test and intensity for a quick refresher.
Use Landmarks And Time Blocks
Break the route into segments—start easy, ride steady for the middle hour, then reassess. Eat on a timer so you don’t forget during the fun parts.
Know Your “Float” Time
Photo stops, traffic, and coasting on long descents cut moving minutes. If your plan calls for three continuous hours at a given effort, budget a little extra clock time.
Frequently Asked “What If” Scenarios
Hilly Course, Same Average Speed
Energy often runs higher because climbs spike effort above your cruise level. Use the top half of the MET range that matches your speed band.
Strong Tailwind Or Many Downhills
Pick the lower side of the range. You’ll feel fresher, and the math reflects that with a smaller total.
Plenty Of Drafting
If you sit in a fast group most of the day, 12–14 mph effort can deliver 16–19 mph speed. Estimate using the lower MET that matches how the ride felt, not the speed alone.
Putting It All Together
Match your usual pace to a MET band, multiply by your body weight and by three hours, then fine-tune up or down for terrain, stops, and drafting. That’s enough to set bottles, snacks, and post-ride meals with confidence.
Want a deeper primer? Try our calorie deficit guide for the broader diet math.