How Many Calories Do 10 Minutes Of Sit Ups Burn? | Core Facts Guide

In 10 minutes, sit ups burn roughly 30–80 calories depending on body weight and effort, based on standard MET calculations.

Calories burned in 10 minutes of sit ups, by weight

Calorie burn from sit ups hinges on two things: your body weight and your effort. A steady, controlled pace lands in a moderate band. Short, all-out bursts push the number higher. The math below uses standard MET values for calisthenics and shows what 10 minutes looks like at two efforts.

Estimated calories from 10 minutes of sit ups
Body weight Moderate (3.8 MET) Vigorous (8.0 MET)
50 kg 33 kcal 70 kcal
60 kg 40 kcal 84 kcal
70 kg 47 kcal 98 kcal
80 kg 53 kcal 112 kcal
90 kg 60 kcal 126 kcal
100 kg 66 kcal 140 kcal

Prefer a gentle pace? Light effort calisthenics are listed at about 2.8 MET. For a 70 kg person that puts 10 minutes near 34 kcal. Heavier bodies scale up; lighter bodies scale down.

Want a cross-check against a broad activity list? The Harvard Health calories table shows 30-minute numbers for “calisthenics” across weights. The pattern matches the table here: more weight and more effort raise burn.

How calorie math works

Physiology folks use METs to compare activities. One MET equals resting energy use. Each step up multiplies your burn. The Compendium assigns calisthenics values that fit sit ups: light at 2.8, moderate at 3.8, and vigorous near 8.0.

The calorie formula is simple: Calories per minute = MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200. For a 70 kg person doing moderate sit ups (3.8 MET), that is 3.8 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 ≈ 4.65 kcal per minute. Ten minutes then lands around 46–47 kcal. Swap in 8.0 MET for hard intervals and you reach about 98 kcal in the same time.

If you like quick rules, here are handy multipliers for 10 minutes: light ≈ 0.49 × weight (kg), moderate ≈ 0.665 × weight, vigorous ≈ 1.4 × weight. Pick the effort that matches your session and you can do the math on the fly.

Not sure how to judge effort? The CDC intensity guide explains it in plain language. In short, moderate lets you talk in short sentences. Vigorous makes conversation tough. Sit ups fit both zones depending on pace, range, and rest.

What changes your number besides weight

Tempo and range

Slow lowers demand. A full curl up with a steady rise and controlled lower burns more than half reps. Add a brief pause at the top and the clock tilts toward work time.

Arm position and anchoring

Hands across the chest keep the lever short. Hands behind the head add leverage and can strain the neck, so keep elbows soft and avoid pulling. Anchored feet bring hip flexors into the mix and can raise output a bit.

Surface and angle

A decline bench turns each rep into a small uphill. That bumps the effort meter. A soft mat helps comfort but doesn’t change energy much.

Work:rest pattern

Ten minutes straight at one pace lands near the moderate line for most people. Swinging between bursts and breathers mimics intervals. That can push the session into vigorous territory even when total minutes match.

Fatigue

Early reps feel easy. As the set grows, form gets sloppy and speed drops. Energy per minute falls when range shortens or pauses fill the rest of the minute. Short breaks keep form crisp and output steadier.

Build a 10-minute sit up session that fits

Pick a template, set a timer, and track reps. Adjust next time based on how you felt at minute nine. Three options below cover a wide spread without fancy gear.

Form-first session

Goal: smooth reps, even breathing, no neck strain. Use hands across the chest and keep your ribs down as you lower. If you feel your hip flexors grab, pause, reset, and shrink the range a touch.

Structure

  • 20 seconds work, 40 seconds rest × 10 rounds
  • Optional swap: curl ups or dead bug
  • Target effort: light to low-moderate

Paced repeats

Goal: steady rhythm and clean form. You should be able to speak in short phrases at the end of each round. Keep heels light or lightly anchored.

Structure

  • 30 seconds work, 15 seconds rest × 12 rounds (back-to-back pairs share rest)
  • Optional add-on: 30 second plank at minute five
  • Target effort: moderate

Power intervals

Goal: crisp bursts with tight bracing. Reach for the knees or hold a small plate at the chest. Keep the set quality high and cut reps if form fades.

Structure

  • 40 seconds hard, 20 seconds rest × 10 rounds
  • Optional add-on: 30 seconds side plank each side between rounds
  • Target effort: vigorous

Sample 10-minute plans with estimated burn

Numbers below use a 70 kg reference body and the MET values listed earlier. Treat them as ranges, not promises, since form and rest patterns swing the dial.

Session templates and estimated burn (70 kg)
Level Plan Est. MET & kcal
Form-first 20:40 × 10 rounds ~2.8 MET · ~34 kcal
Paced repeats 30:15 × 12 rounds ~3.8 MET · ~47 kcal
Power intervals 40:20 × 10 rounds ~8.0 MET · ~98 kcal

Sit ups, crunches, and planks

All three train your trunk. They just do it in different ways.

Sit ups

Largest range of motion. Hip flexors help pull the torso up. That shared load can raise total energy a bit, especially when speed climbs.

Crunches

Shorter range and more spine flexion at the top. Energy sits near the light-to-moderate band. Great when your back gets cranky with full sit ups.

Planks

Isometric hold. Low movement, lots of bracing. The energy per minute is lower than hard sit ups, yet the posture carryover is strong for most folks. Pairing planks with sit ups balances the plan.

Form cues that save your neck and back

Keep your chin tucked and eyes on the ceiling. Use your hands to guide, not yank. As you curl, think ribs toward hips. As you lower, keep contact between low back and mat until the last moment.

Avoid locking your feet under a heavy object if your hip flexors take over. A light anchor is fine if it helps rhythm. Pain is a hard stop. Swap to curl ups, reverse crunches, or dead bug if needed.

Make sit ups earn you more results

You’re chasing total energy across the day, not just one set. Pair your 10-minute core block with a brisk walk, a short bike spin, or a jog. Add a few sets of push ups or rows on alternate days. These layers move your weekly minutes toward the agency goals on the CDC page and build a balanced routine.

Track reps, not just time. A small bump in quality reps at the same work:rest pattern means you did more with the same minutes. If reps stall, change the lever: hands to chest, arms high, then hands behind head. Small tweaks keep progress moving without guessing.

Pick your rep pace

Reps drive feel. A controlled tempo lands near one rep every three to four seconds. That’s 15–20 reps per minute. Bursts can jump to 25–35 per minute. A quick cadence pushes energy, yet only if each rep finishes with solid form. If your neck or low back chirps, slow down and shorten the range. Keep reps honest.

Set a goal for each work block. Example: 15 clean reps in every 30 second window. If you keep that mark across all rounds, raise the goal by one or two next time. This simple game turns minutes into measurable progress.

Weighted, decline, and bicycle moves

Adding a small plate at the chest makes each rep harder without changing the timer. A gentle decline adds a gravity tax on the way up. Both tweaks nudge your session toward the vigorous band when rests are short. Start light, test a few reps, then build across weeks.

Bicycle crunches bring rotation and a longer time under tension. The effort sits between sit ups and planks for many people. Mix them in as a station between sit up rounds to boost time on task while giving your hip flexors a breather.

Two worked examples

Case A: 60 kg, steady pace. Moderate effort uses 3.8 MET. Per minute burn is 3.8 × 3.5 × 60 ÷ 200 ≈ 3.99 kcal. Ten minutes totals about 40 kcal. That lines up with the table near the top of this page.

Case B: 90 kg, hard intervals. Vigorous uses 8.0 MET. Per minute burn is 8.0 × 3.5 × 90 ÷ 200 = 12.6 kcal. Ten minutes totals about 126 kcal. The spread between Case A and Case B shows why weight and effort matter most.

Simple ways to keep score

Use a timer app and a small notebook. Write your plan, reps, and how the last round felt. Rate the session from one to ten. If you can’t talk in complete sentences during your work blocks, you’re near the vigorous end. If you can chat freely, you’re closer to light than moderate.

Heart rate straps and watches can estimate energy for longer workouts. For a short core block, rep counts plus the MET math will give you a cleaner picture. Repeat the same setup for a few weeks before you change more than one variable.

Common mistakes that waste energy

  • Yanking on the head. Keep hands light and let your abs do the work.
  • Half reps that stop short. Finish the curl and control the lower.
  • Rushing the first minute. Blow-ups early lead to sloppy form late.
  • No plan for rest. Small, regular breathers beat a single long pause.
  • Ignoring soreness signals. Swap to curl ups or dead bug if your back talks.