About 300–800 calories in 100 minutes of walking, depending on body weight, speed, terrain, and technique.
3.0 mph (3.5 MET)
3.5 mph (4.3 MET)
4.0 mph (5.0 MET)
Easy Stroll
- 2.8–3.2 mph
- Talk test: easy chat
- Flat sidewalks
Gentle pace
Brisk Walk
- 3.3–3.9 mph
- Talk test: short phrases
- Firm surface
Moderate effort
Incline Or Trail
- 3–5% grade
- Poles optional
- Mixed terrain
Extra burn
How Many Calories Does A 100-Minute Walk Burn?
Calorie burn comes down to a simple idea: how much oxygen your muscles demand at a given pace and grade. Researchers package that demand into MET values. A MET is the energy cost of an activity relative to resting. Walking on level ground at about 3.5 mph carries a MET of 4.3, while 4.0 mph sits at 5.0. Slower, easy walking lands near 3.5 MET. These figures come from the widely used Compendium of Physical Activities. See the walking MET table.
Once you have a MET, the math is straightforward: Calories = MET × 3.5 × body-weight(kg) ÷ 200 × minutes. This is the same approach many exercise labs, universities, and coaching groups teach. If you prefer a gentle entry point, Texas A&M’s public guide also lists walking METs and how to use them in real life. Check the METs explainer.
Calories Burned In 100 Minutes: Quick Range
A 70 kg walker burns roughly ≈430 kcal at 3.0 mph, ≈530 kcal at 3.5 mph, and ≈610 kcal at 4.0 mph across 100 minutes on flat, firm ground. Lighter bodies land lower; heavier bodies land higher. Harvard’s long-running chart for 30-minute sessions lines up with these numbers when scaled to 100 minutes. Browse the Harvard table.
Big Table: 100 Minutes On Flat Ground
Use this as a starting point. Pick the row closest to your body weight.
| Body Weight (kg) | 3.0 mph (3.5 MET) · kcal | 3.5 mph (4.3 MET) · kcal |
|---|---|---|
| 50 | 306 | 376 |
| 60 | 368 | 451 |
| 70 | 429 | 527 |
| 80 | 490 | 602 |
| 90 | 551 | 677 |
What Changes Your Calorie Burn
Body Weight
More mass requires more energy to move the same distance. Two people walking side by side at the same pace won’t burn the same number of calories. The heavier walker spends more energy each minute.
Pace And Breathing
A faster pace lifts the MET. A handy cue is the CDC talk test: at moderate intensity you can talk but not sing; at vigorous intensity you can say only a few words before pausing for breath. That shift from comfortable sentences to short phrases is your sign that burn is climbing. CDC talk test guide.
Terrain, Grade, And Surface
Grade amplifies effort even when speed stays the same. At 3.5 mph, moving up a 1–5% incline raises the MET to about 5.3; steeper grades jump even higher. Uneven ground, grass, or soft paths also nudge the total upward. These effects are reflected in compendium listings for uphill walking. See incline entries.
Arm Swing, Stride, And Poles
Active arm swing and a snappy cadence improve forward momentum. Using Nordic poles adds upper-body work and lifts energy cost by roughly one MET at similar speeds, which can add around 120 kcal across 100 minutes for a 70 kg walker. Compendium entries list Nordic walking near 5.3 MET at moderate paces.
Build Your Own 100-Minute Estimate
Step 1: Pick A MET
Choose a value that fits your route: 3.5 MET for an easy 3.0 mph, 4.3 MET for a brisk 3.5 mph, 5.0 MET for a very brisk 4.0 mph, 5.3 MET for a 3–5% grade at about 3.5 mph. The compendium PDF lists many more variants, including grass and steeper hills.
Step 2: Do The Math
Calories = MET × 3.5 × body-weight(kg) ÷ 200 × minutes.
Worked Examples
Example A: 70 Kg Brisk Walker
MET 4.3 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 × 100 = ≈527 kcal.
Example B: 80 Kg Very Brisk Walker
MET 5.0 × 3.5 × 80 ÷ 200 × 100 = ≈700 kcal.
Example C: 70 Kg On A Mild Hill
MET 5.3 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 × 100 = ≈649 kcal.
Calorie Burn For 100-Minute Walking Sessions
Here’s a pace-and-conditions overview for a 70 kg walker. Use it to pick the scenario that mirrors your day.
| Pace / Condition | MET | Calories (70 kg, 100 min) |
|---|---|---|
| 2.5 mph, level | 3.0 | 368 |
| 3.0 mph, level | 3.5 | 429 |
| 3.5 mph, level | 4.3 | 527 |
| 4.0 mph, level | 5.0 | 612 |
| 3.5 mph, uphill 1–5% | 5.3 | 649 |
| 3.5 mph, uphill 6–15% | 8.0 | 980 |
| Nordic walking, 3.6–4.4 mph | 5.3 | 649 |
How Many Steps In 100 Minutes?
Cadence varies, yet most adults land between roughly 105–120 steps per minute during a purposeful walk. That places a 100-minute outing near 10,500–12,000 steps. If your stride is compact or the route is hilly, those totals still sit in that band while burn tilts upward due to higher effort.
Make 100 Minutes Easier To Fit
Split The Time
Two 50-minute sessions deliver nearly the same energy cost as one long loop when pace and terrain match. If you enjoy a warm-up, the second session can even feel sharper.
Use A Route With Natural Hills
Small rolling climbs sprinkle in short spikes of effort that bump energy use without turning the walk into a grind. A 3–5% grade is plenty.
Try Stride Tweaks
Slightly quicker steps with relaxed shoulders keep momentum high. If you like gadgets, light trekking poles add rhythm and extra muscle groups.
Bring Simple Fuel And Water
For a 100-minute outing, water usually covers it. If you feel flat, a small fruit or a few dates midway can perk you up and keep the last miles snappy.
Safety And Comfort Notes
Heat, Cold, And Wind
On hot days, shade and earlier start times help. In cold or windy weather, layer up and keep hands warm so your arm swing stays smooth.
Treadmill Vs Outside
Treadmills simplify pacing and let you set a steady 1% grade to mimic air resistance. Outdoors brings variety and micro-changes that often raise total effort a touch.
Shoes And Surfaces
Supportive shoes with a bit of flex keep calves happy. If sidewalks pound your joints, look for crushed gravel or packed dirt paths.
Why Your Number May Differ From A Friend’s
Even with the same route and speed, small details add up. Arm swing, stride length, posture, and how much you fidget at stoplights all influence the tally. Age, height, and fitness change economy too, which is why compendium authors publish “corrected MET” methods for personal adjustments. If you like fine-tuning, that research is a fun rabbit hole.
Put It All Together
Pick a pace you can hold, choose a route you enjoy, and use the MET formula to get a number that matches your body and your walk. Over time, log a few sessions and compare the feel across flat ground, mild hills, and pole days. The pattern you’ll see is steady: longer time on your feet and a little more effort nudge your 100-minute total from the low 300s into the 500–700+ range, with steeper climbs taking it higher.