12 Surya Namaskar burn about 90–190 calories for a 60-kg person, depending on pace; heavier bodies and faster flow burn more.
Gentle pace (≈3.3 MET)
Steady flow (≈3.8 MET)
Dynamic flow (≈7.4 MET)
Slow Hold (SSN)
- 30 s per pose
- Strong isometrics, steady breath
- Strength + mobility feel
Unhurried
Steady Flow
- 1–2 min per round
- Even transitions, nasal breathing
- Easy to sustain
Balanced
Dynamic Flow
- About 2 min per round with power
- Heat builds fast
- Suits trained bodies
Sweaty
Calories Burned By 12 Sun Salutations (Surya Namaskar)
Sun Salutation is a 12-pose sequence. Many practitioners count one side as a round, while some schools call two sides a set. Here we use “12 rounds” to mean twelve full passes of the 12 poses, any side, back-to-back. Pace changes the burn a lot, so the numbers below use a standard method and cite lab data where available.
How The Math Works
Researchers estimate calorie use from activity intensity expressed as METs. The widely used equation is: calories per minute = MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200. We then multiply by minutes spent completing 12 rounds.
What Counts As One Round?
Traditions differ. Some groups define a cycle as two rounds (right and left), while others track each side as its own round. The sequence itself has 12 poses; timing per pose varies from about 10 seconds to longer holds. That timing choice sets the total minutes for your 12 rounds.
A Big Picture Table: Calories For 12 Rounds By Weight
Assuming a steady flow pace about two minutes per round (≈24 minutes total) and two intensity bands—moderate Surya Namaskar around 3.8 MET and a dynamic flow around 7.4 MET—here’s what 12 rounds look like at different body weights:
| Body Weight | 12 Rounds · 3.8 MET | 12 Rounds · 7.4 MET |
|---|---|---|
| 50 kg (110 lb) | ≈80 kcal | ≈155 kcal |
| 60 kg (132 lb) | ≈96 kcal | ≈186 kcal |
| 70 kg (154 lb) | ≈112 kcal | ≈218 kcal |
| 80 kg (176 lb) | ≈128 kcal | ≈249 kcal |
| 90 kg (198 lb) | ≈144 kcal | ≈280 kcal |
| 100 kg (220 lb) | ≈160 kcal | ≈311 kcal |
Where Those METs Come From
Lab work on Surya Namaskar shows a wide range. One controlled trial measured oxygen use of about 26 ml/kg/min, which is roughly 7.4 MET—vigorous for trained adults. Reviews of yoga sessions that include Sun Salutation report average intensities nearer to 3–4 MET for typical practice. That’s why you see two bands in the table.
Keyword Angle: Calories Burned By 12 Sun Salutations In Real Sessions
How long do 12 rounds take? Protocols vary. In a “fast” layout where each pose holds ~10 seconds, one round takes about two minutes, so 12 rounds land near 24 minutes. Slower methods may hold poses ~30 seconds, pushing one round to about six minutes. A quick studio Sun A often takes 30–60 seconds per round; 12 of those would be 6–12 minutes.
Pick Your Pace, Then Plug In
Use the MET formula once and you can estimate any plan you like. Here’s a worked example for 60 kg:
- Steady flow, 3.8 MET, 12 rounds at 1 min each (≈12 min): 3.8 × 3.5 × 60 ÷ 200 × 12 ≈ 48 kcal.
- Steady flow, 3.8 MET, 12 rounds at 2 min each (≈24 min): same math gives 96 kcal.
- Dynamic flow, 7.4 MET, 12 rounds at 2 min each: 7.4 × 3.5 × 60 ÷ 200 × 24 ≈ 186 kcal.
Keep rests brief always.
Evidence Snapshot
In a laboratory session of four rounds performed by trained adults, average intensity sat near 80% of predicted max heart rate and totaled about 230 kcal in 30 minutes for a 60 kg participant—consistent with ~7.4 MET. A broader review that pooled yoga energy studies found session intensities averaging ~3.3 MET (range 1.83–7.4), which explains the big span your practice can inhabit. Studies that teach “slow” versus “fast” Sun Salutation also show clear timing differences: holding each of the 12 poses for ~10 seconds makes a ~2-minute round, while ~30-second holds can stretch a round to ~6 minutes.
Quick Calculator Guide You Can Reuse
Grab your weight in kilograms and decide your pace. Pick an intensity band that matches how you move. Then do this:
- Minutes: rounds × minutes per round.
- Calories per minute: MET × 3.5 × kg ÷ 200.
- Total calories: calories per minute × minutes.
Two fast checks for common cases:
- At 60 kg and 3.8 MET, each minute is ~4 kcal. So every extra 5 minutes adds ~20 kcal.
- At 80 kg and 7.4 MET, each minute is ~8.3 kcal. Twelve 1-minute rounds will be ~100 kcal; twelve 2-minute rounds land near ~200 kcal.
Time And Burn For 12 Rounds At 60 Kg
The table below uses the moderate band (3.8 MET). Match it to how your class or home flow feels.
| Pace | Total Time | Calories (3.8 MET) |
|---|---|---|
| Quick studio feel · 0.5 min/round | ≈6 minutes | ≈24 kcal |
| Steady breath-led flow · 1 min/round | ≈12 minutes | ≈48 kcal |
| Measured practice · 2 min/round | ≈24 minutes | ≈96 kcal |
| Very slow holds · 6 min/round | ≈72 minutes | ≈288 kcal |
Mistakes That Skew Your Numbers
Counting Sets Instead Of Rounds
Some programs count a “set” as two rounds—one right side and one left side. If your tracker or class notes use sets, your total rounds will be double the set count. Adjust your calculation so minutes line up.
Racing The Breath
Short, choppy breaths can make the work feel harder without improving the estimate. A smooth inhale into raised arms and a smooth exhale into folds tends to keep transitions tidy and repeatable.
Ignoring Rest Pauses
Short child’s pose breaks are fine. If you rest often, subtract that time before running the formula. The MET equation expects active minutes.
Why Your Count May Differ
Three things swing the math: pace, skill, and weight. Faster transitions raise METs. Clean technique lets you sustain effort safely, which nudges intensity up. Body mass drives the equation directly; a larger person doing the same work will list a higher calorie total.
Trusted References For Your Own Checks
The MET equation above is standard in exercise science; see activity codes in the 2011 Compendium of Physical Activities and a Texas A&M guide that explains the math.
Use External References When You Want To Double-Check
Scan your duration. Decide whether your session felt moderate or dynamic. Then run the equation once. Keep a short log so the next time you can plug in minutes and weight and read your answer at a glance.
When To Ease Off
Shoulders that pinch during chaturanga need a higher bottom position or a knee-down option. If dizziness shows up, slow the breath and step instead of jump. A smooth practice beats a forced push. Adjust as your breath allows.