Per rep, sit-ups burn about 0.2–0.5 calories; a 155-lb person uses ~0.23 (moderate) or ~0.46 (vigorous) per rep.
Per-Rep Calories
Typical Range
Upper Range
Basic Form
- Heels down, ribs to hips
- Full, pain-free range
- Breathe out on the way up
Foundation
Tempo Sets
- 2-1-2 rhythm per rep
- 10–20 reps per minute
- Rest 60–90 seconds
Control
Weighted Reps
- Plate at chest
- Keep spine neutral
- Shorter sets, longer rest
Advanced
What “Calories Per Sit-Up” Really Means
Energy burn from a sit-up comes from effort over time, not magic in a single rep. Researchers group effort into MET values (metabolic equivalents). One MET reflects resting energy use; higher METs reflect higher effort. The CDC explains METs plainly and why they’re used in exercise science.
The current Compendium of Physical Activities lists body-weight “calisthenics” such as pushups and sit-ups at several effort levels: light (~2.8 MET), moderate (~3.8 MET), and vigorous (~7.5 MET). These entries sit under “Conditioning Exercise” and map well to real training—slow crunch-style work, steady sets, or hard, fast sets. Source: the Compendium’s conditioning table for calisthenics.
Quick Formula: From MET To Calories
Researchers use a simple conversion for minutes of work: calories per minute = 0.0175 × MET × body weight (kg). This equation is a standard teaching tool in sports-medicine handouts from universities and clinical programs. You can plug any MET from the Compendium into that equation to get a solid estimate.
Calories Burned From Each Sit-Up: What Changes It
Two lifters won’t get the same per-rep number. Body weight and intensity drive most of the spread, with range of motion and tempo playing a smaller role. Faster sets don’t always mean higher burn per rep; they often shift the math toward more reps per minute at the same total minute-by-minute burn.
Table 1 — Calories Per Minute From Sit-Up Sessions
This table uses the standard equation above with Compendium MET values for moderate and vigorous calisthenics. Choose the weight closest to you to size your sets.
| Body Weight | Moderate (3.8 MET) kcal/min |
Vigorous (7.5 MET) kcal/min |
|---|---|---|
| 125 lb (56.7 kg) | ~3.8 | ~7.4 |
| 155 lb (70.3 kg) | ~4.7 | ~9.2 |
| 185 lb (83.9 kg) | ~5.6 | ~11.0 |
| 205 lb (93.0 kg) | ~5.9 | ~11.9 |
To put those minute-by-minute numbers in context, it helps to know your resting baseline. Your body burns energy all day even while seated; that background burn varies by size, age, and sex. Many readers find it easier to plan training when they first understand their resting calories per day.
Turning Minutes Into “Per Rep”
Once you’ve got calories per minute, divide by reps per minute. If you do 20 clean sit-ups in a minute at a steady pace, a 155-lb person at moderate effort lands near 0.23 calories per rep (about 23 calories per 100 reps). Bump the effort to vigorous and keep a fast but tidy 30-rep minute, and you’re near 0.31 calories per rep (about 31 per 100). These match the featured answer range at the top.
Is A Crunch Different From A Full Sit-Up?
Yes—shorter range and less hip flexor involvement generally drop the effort. That shifts you toward the light/moderate MET band. If your neck or lower back gets cranky, reduce range, brace through the ribs, and shorten the work interval. Quality beats speed here.
Worked Examples You Can Copy
Example A: 125-Lb Beginner, Steady Pace
Pick the moderate MET (3.8). Calories per minute ≈ 0.0175 × 3.8 × 56.7 ≈ 3.8 kcal. Doing 10 reps in that minute puts you near 0.38 calories per rep; 20 reps drops the per-rep figure to ~0.19 while total for the minute stays ~3.8.
Example B: 155-Lb Intermediate, Density Sets
Moderate effort again: 4.7 kcal/min. Hit 5 rounds of 30 seconds on, 30 seconds off, totaling 2.5 minutes of work. You’ll spend ~11–12 calories on the sit-ups in that block.
Example C: 185-Lb Advanced, Vigorous Pace
Use 7.5 MET: ~11.0 kcal/min. Three one-minute max-rep sets with long rests could spend ~33 calories on the sit-up work, not counting transitions.
Form Cues That Protect Your Back
Set Your Brace
Think “ribs to hips” and press the tongue lightly to the roof of your mouth. That cue helps a smooth exhale on the way up.
Control The Bottom
Don’t flop. Lower under control until shoulder blades kiss the floor. A two-second down beats a crash every time.
Pick A Range You Own
Some bodies love a curl-up; others do better with a gentle hollow-body sit-up. You should feel your abs do the work, not your neck.
Programming Ideas That Make Sense
Time Blocks
Set a timer for anywhere from 20 to 60 seconds. Keep reps smooth, count only clean ones, and stop shy of form breakdown. That keeps your estimate from the table realistic.
Rep Ladders
Try 10-15-20-25-20-15-10 with a minute rest between rungs. Totals are easy to add, and calories scale with the work minutes you log.
Pairing For Density
Match sit-ups with a non-competing move, like light goblet squats or a carry. The minute-by-minute math still holds, while your session feels smoother.
How This Compares To Other Moves
Broad tables from university and medical publishers show similar or higher burn for whole-body work. A Harvard Health table lists calisthenics at moderate and vigorous levels, with values that line up with the Compendium-based numbers you saw above.
Table 2 — Calories Per 100 Sit-Ups (Practical Pacing)
Assumptions: moderate sets ≈ 20 reps/min using 3.8 MET; vigorous sets ≈ 30 reps/min using 7.5 MET. If your pace or range changes, your number will shift a bit.
| Body Weight | Per 100 (Moderate) | Per 100 (Vigorous) |
|---|---|---|
| 125 lb (56.7 kg) | ~18.9 kcal | ~24.8 kcal |
| 155 lb (70.3 kg) | ~23.4 kcal | ~30.8 kcal |
| 185 lb (83.9 kg) | ~27.9 kcal | ~36.7 kcal |
Ways To Raise Or Lower The Burn
Slow Down To Learn Control
A slower tempo with a clean brace builds skill. Calories per rep creep up when reps per minute drop, though your per-minute total stays near the same for a given MET.
Add A Small Load
Hug a light plate or hold a small dumbbell at the chest. Keep sets shorter and rest longer so your technique stays crisp.
Upgrade The Range
An ab-mat or rolled towel under the low back can add a touch of extension at the bottom. That increases the work without forcing speed.
Smart Substitutions If Sit-Ups Don’t Agree With You
Crunch Variations
Try a curl-up, dead bug, or toe-tap crunch. You’ll live in the light-to-moderate band, which suits longer practice sets.
Plank Family
Front planks and side planks build trunk stiffness with fewer moving parts. Hold times make it easy to track minutes and estimate energy spend from METs for isometrics.
Carry And Breathe
Farmer’s carries and suitcase carries raise heart rate and train your trunk at the same time. Keep the walk smooth and the breath steady.
Frequently Missed Details That Skew The Math
Tempo Creep
First 10 reps feel tight, last 10 get sloppy. If the back arches or the chin juts forward, you’re counting reps that don’t reflect the intended workload.
False Starts
Partial reps have their place, just log them as such. Keep a note like “4 × 20, crisp range” so your estimate matches the work you actually did.
Breath Holds
Valsalva has a time and place, but constant breath holds will shorten sets and make calorie estimates less consistent.
From Numbers To A Simple Plan
Pick Your Band
Choose light, moderate, or vigorous. If you’re new, start in the middle and adjust based on how your neck and back feel the next day.
Set The Minutes
Two to four minutes of honest work is plenty at first. Spread that across intervals and keep quality high.
Track One Variable
Either bump reps per minute or add load, not both in the same week. That keeps your estimates tidy and your form consistent.
Why These Numbers Are Trustworthy
The MET values come from the 2024 Compendium’s “Conditioning Exercise” table for calisthenics. The minutes-to-calories conversion uses the widely taught 0.0175 × MET × kg equation you’ll see in sports-medicine coursework. Broad activity charts from medical publishers, such as the Harvard Health calorie table, land in the same neighborhood when you match effort and weight classes.
Want a broader plan for body composition? You might like our calorie deficit guide for tying training minutes to nutrition.