How Many Calories Burned Walking 5 Mph? | Fast Facts

At a steady 5 mph, a 150-lb person burns about 565 calories per hour of fast walking on level ground.

Calories Burned At 5 Mph Walking — Real-World Ranges

At 5 mph, you’re covering a mile every 12 minutes. Energy cost at this pace sits around 8.3 to 8.7 METs based on the Adult Compendium’s treadmill entry for 5.0–5.5 mph and standard exercise equations. MET is a multiplier of resting energy use; more METs means more burn per minute. See the Compendium’s listing for “walking, treadmill, 5.0–5.5 mph” and its 8.3 MET reference, and pair it with CDC guidance on physical activity to plan safe progress.

Quick Math You Can Use

To estimate calories, use this rule of thumb: Calories ≈ MET × body weight (kg) × time (hours). With an 8.3–8.7 MET range, someone at 150 lb (68 kg) will land near 565–590 calories per hour on level ground. Heavier bodies burn more per minute; lighter bodies burn less. Hills and arm drive raise the total.

Table 1 — Hour And Half-Hour Totals (Level, 5 Mph)

This broad table pairs common body weights with 30- and 60-minute sessions at 5 mph on flat ground. Values are rounded for easy planning.

Body Weight 30 Minutes 60 Minutes
120 lb (54 kg) ~226 kcal ~452 kcal
150 lb (68 kg) ~282 kcal ~565 kcal
180 lb (82 kg) ~339 kcal ~678 kcal
210 lb (95 kg) ~395 kcal ~791 kcal
240 lb (109 kg) ~452 kcal ~904 kcal

Speed Vs. Gait

Most people break into an easy jog near this pace. If you keep a power-walk stride, arm swing and stride rate climb to keep up. The Compendium still lists a treadmill walking entry at 5.0–5.5 mph with an 8.3 MET cost, which tracks with oxygen-cost formulas used in exercise labs. That means fast walking at this speed can rival a slow run for burn.

Once you start tracking sessions, a small step counter helps with pace and form cues. If you want a simple method, set a timer, match a music beat near 180 steps per minute, and track your steps so you can repeat good days.

What Changes The Number?

Calorie burn isn’t a fixed stamp. Several levers push it up or down. Here’s how to tune them safely.

Body Weight

Energy scales with mass. Two people at the same pace won’t burn the same amount; the heavier walker uses more energy per minute. That’s why the first table shows a steady jump as weight rises.

Grade And Terrain

Even a small uphill adds cost. Exercise equations from sports medicine show that adding a 1% incline at 5 mph raises oxygen use and bumps METs by a few tenths. That turns into ~3–5% more calories per mile. Use gentle grades if you’re new to this pace; save steep hills for short spurts.

Duration And Splits

Two 30-minute bouts can match a single hour for calories, and often feel easier to recover from. Many walkers build weekly totals by stacking short sessions around lunch and later in the day.

Form And Arm Drive

Keep your chin level, shoulders down, and hands relaxed. Drive the elbows back, not across your body. A quicker cadence with a slightly shorter stride keeps ground contact soft and helps you hold pace without a shuffle.

How To Estimate Your Own Burn

You can nail down a personal estimate with three pieces: your weight in kilograms (lb ÷ 2.2046), your session length, and a MET pick that fits your setup.

Pick A MET Value

On a flat treadmill or smooth path, use 8.3–8.7 METs for 5 mph fast walking. On a mild 1% grade, use ~9.0 METs. Outdoor hills or headwinds can push that higher. The 8.3 entry comes from the Adult Compendium’s treadmill listing; the bump for grade aligns with standard equations taught in exercise physiology.

Do The Math

Say you weigh 180 lb (82 kg). An hour at 5 mph on level ground with an 8.3 MET cost lands near 678 calories. A half hour is roughly half that. Add a gentle 1% incline and you’ll tack on another few dozen calories in the same hour.

Use The Numbers To Plan

Match your weekly time goal to your recovery. Three to four hours of fast sessions per week is a lot for beginners; start with 20–30 minutes, add five minutes every few outings, and slide in a rest day after tough work.

Minute-By-Minute Feel And Safety

At 5 mph, breathing is labored and talking in full sentences is tough. That’s normal for vigorous work. Warm up for five minutes, then settle into the target pace. If you lose form, dial it down for a minute, then ramp back.

Shoes, Surface, And Soreness

Pick a stable shoe with a firm heel counter. Treadmills feel kinder on joints during the learning phase. Outdoor tracks are smooth and predictable. Watch for hip flexor tightness and sore shins in the first few weeks; both ease with gradual loading and light mobility work.

Hydration And Fuel

For sessions under an hour, water before and after is plenty for most healthy adults. Longer runs or hot days call for sipping during the session. A small carb snack 30–60 minutes prior keeps energy steady if you train early or fasted.

Table 2 — Calories Per Mile At 5 Mph

One mile takes 12 minutes at this pace. The table shows per-mile burn on level ground and with a 1% incline, using the equations labs teach for estimating oxygen cost at this speed.

Body Weight Level (kcal/mi) +1% Grade (kcal/mi)
120 lb (54 kg) ~94 ~98
150 lb (68 kg) ~118 ~123
180 lb (82 kg) ~141 ~147
210 lb (95 kg) ~165 ~172
240 lb (109 kg) ~189 ~196

Pacing Tips To Hold 12-Minute Miles

Set Cadence

Use a playlist or metronome near 180 steps per minute. Short, quick steps stop over-striding and keep you light on your feet.

Use Short Hills

Toss in 60–120-second hill blocks with easy walking between them. Hills punch up the burn without trashing form.

Breathe On A Rhythm

Match two steps in, two steps out. When you tire, switch to three in, three out for a short spell. It steadies effort across the mile.

How This Lines Up With Official References

The Adult Compendium lists a treadmill walking entry at 5.0–5.5 mph at 8.3 METs, which is the anchor for the first table. Sports-medicine equations peg the oxygen cost near 8.6 METs at 0% grade and near 9.0 METs at 1% grade at this speed, which supports the per-mile table. Pair these references with Adult Compendium MET values and CDC advice on activity and weight when you want a deeper dive or need a baseline to share with a coach or clinician.

Build A Week That Works

Starter Week

Day 1: 25–30 minutes at steady pace. Day 2: Rest or easy stroll. Day 3: 30 minutes with two short hills. Day 4: Rest. Day 5: 35–40 minutes steady. Weekend: optional 20–30 minutes easy. Adjust the days to match life and recovery.

Progression Week

Two 30-minute sessions and one 45-minute session at 5 mph spread across the week. Split any hour into two halves if that keeps your form crisp.

When To Back Off

Persistent shin pain, toe numbness, or a limp is a cue to slow down and shorten sessions until the issue clears. Swap in a flat route or treadmill while you reset.

Calories And Weight Goals

Energy burn from fast walking helps create a calorie gap. Diet drives most weight change, while regular movement helps keep results. See the CDC’s stance on pairing intake and activity for steady progress, and use a trustworthy planner if you like numbers.

If you want a deeper dive on energy balance and smart pacing for fat loss, try our calorie deficit guide next.