How Many Calories Do 15-Year-Olds Burn? | Real-World Ranges

At age 15, daily energy burn typically ranges from about 1,800 to 3,000 calories, based on size, sex, and activity level.

Calories Burned At Age 15: What Drives It

Two levers set the range: resting energy (the baseline your body uses at rest) and movement on top of that. Resting energy climbs with height, weight, and late-puberty changes. Movement can double the total on a busy training day.

The science behind estimates uses predictive equations and activity factors. The National Academies’ Estimated Energy Requirement method blends age, sex, size, and activity to target energy balance for teens and adults. It’s a practical way to map a day’s intake to a day’s burn while growth continues. EER definition and method come straight from that source.

Quick Ranges You Can Use Today

Use these ballpark ranges as a planning guide, then shift up or down based on real life. The profiles below reflect common builds at this age and typical activity settings.

Broad Daily Burn By Profile

Profile Estimated Resting (BMR) Daily Burn Range
Smaller Girl • 45–50 kg • 155–160 cm 1,200–1,350 kcal 1,700–2,200 kcal
Average Girl • 55–60 kg • 160–165 cm 1,300–1,500 kcal 1,900–2,500 kcal
Smaller Boy • 50–55 kg • 160–168 cm 1,350–1,550 kcal 2,000–2,600 kcal
Average Boy • 60–70 kg • 168–175 cm 1,500–1,700 kcal 2,300–3,000 kcal
Late-Bloom Build • 70–80 kg • taller 1,650–1,900 kcal 2,600–3,300 kcal

These bands combine resting energy estimates with typical activity factors from study days to training days. If movement is light for several days, use the lower edge. If practice runs long or a match goes late, slide toward the top end.

Tracking steps or practice time helps you tune the range; simple logs or a watch can do it once you learn to track your steps with intent.

How Estimators Work Behind The Scenes

Resting energy can be estimated with age-specific formulas that were built from measured oxygen use in large datasets. One widely used set is the FAO/WHO/UNU Schofield equations, which include teen-specific versions. These give a baseline that later gets multiplied by an activity factor to reflect daily movement. See the FAO technical annex for the equations and context on teens. FAO/WHO/UNU BMR annex outlines those details.

Activity sits on top. The most practical way to capture it is with MET values (multiples of resting energy) for common activities. The Youth Compendium provides METy values tailored to ages 6–18, so a 15-year-old walking briskly or playing basketball gets an age-aware energy cost rather than an adult proxy.

What A School Day Versus A Training Day Looks Like

Picture two weekdays. One brings classes, stairs, a walk home, and a short club session. The other adds a long practice plus extra scrimmage. Total burn changes a lot across those two patterns.

Typical School Day Pattern

Think light commute, classes, lunch break, and 45–60 minutes of moderate play. For many teens, this lands near 1.8–2.4k calories, assuming average size and a bit of walking between periods.

Training Day Pattern

Add a 90-minute practice or a game. The METy for drills, running plays, and repeat sprints stacks up fast. This can push totals into the mid-2k or low-3k range for a taller or more muscular build.

Activity Targets That Keep Health On Track

Public health guidance sets a clear daily movement target for ages 6–17. The U.S. recommendation calls for at least 60 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous activity each day, with muscle-strengthening and bone-loading on several days. You can find the details and examples right from the source at the CDC activity guidelines.

Sample Calorie Burn For Common Teen Activities

Use this chart to get a feel for session-level energy cost. METy values come from the Youth Compendium. Calories are estimated for a 60 kg teen; scale up or down in rough proportion to body weight.

METy And 30-Minute Session Estimates

Activity METy ~Calories In 30 Min (60 kg)
Brisk Walk (5–6 km/h) 5.0–6.0 155–185
Recreational Cycling 6.0–7.0 185–215
Basketball Practice 6.0–6.5 185–200
Soccer Drills/Scrimmage 7.0–8.0 215–245
Jump Rope 7.1–7.4 220–230
Running (8–9 km/h) 7.0–8.5 215–260
Strength Circuit (Bodyweight) 4.5–5.0 140–155
Esports/Console Gaming (Seated) 1.3–1.7 40–55

Want to browse the source data? The Youth Compendium lists activity-by-age METy entries across play, sport, and everyday movement. The table above pulls from entries for ages 13–15 with light smoothing from their published set. See the index here: Youth MET listing.

Setting A Personal Range

Start with size. A lighter, shorter teen will land closer to the low end of the ranges, while a taller, heavier teen sits higher. Then layer in weekly rhythm. More practices, matches, or labor push things up. Fewer sessions and more study time nudge them down.

Simple Way To Calibrate

  1. Pick a starting daily number from the profile table.
  2. Hold that intake steady for 2–3 weeks while you track weight and energy.
  3. If weight trends down and energy dips, add 150–250 kcal. If weight trends up and you want steady weight, trim 150–250 kcal.

Hunger cues, sleep, and training output also help you tune. Teens grow in spurts, so the “right” number moves over the year.

When Teams, Seasons, And Growth Change The Math

Season shifts matter. Preseason and tournament weeks bring bigger totals. Off-season or exam blocks bring smaller ones. Growth spurts change resting energy and training output at the same time, which widens the daily swing.

Signs You Need A Bump

  • Persistent fatigue during warm-ups
  • Hard time finishing sets at usual loads
  • Unplanned weight drop over two to three weeks

Signs You Can Dial Back

  • Steady weight gain while activity is flat
  • Low appetite on rest days
  • Extra snacks piling on with no hunger

Using Official Guidance Wisely

Public sources help you set guardrails. The CDC outlines daily activity targets for ages 6–17, including examples for aerobic, muscle, and bone-strengthening work. Read the plain-language page here: what counts for teens. For energy math, the National Academies’ EER method is the standard for estimating needs in population groups; it’s a solid anchor when paired with real-world tracking.

Sample Day Builds For 1.9k, 2.3k, And 2.8k Targets

Here’s how different daily targets might pair with movement. Use these as planning sketches, not strict menus.

~1,900 kcal Day

  • School day with short walk both ways
  • PE block or 30 min of shooting hoops
  • Light chores at home

~2,300 kcal Day

  • Bike to school and back
  • 60 min team practice
  • Homework break walk

~2,800 kcal Day

  • Morning run or gym class
  • 90 min practice with drills
  • Weekend match or scrimmage

Frequently Missed Factors

Late-Puberty Differences

Boys in late puberty often see a fast rise in lean mass, which lifts resting energy and session output. Girls may see smaller shifts in lean mass and larger changes tied to cycle phase and sport type.

Non-Exercise Movement

Walking between classes, stairs, and standing during labs add up. Small habits cushion total burn on quiet weeks.

Recovery And Sleep

Short sleep drags on training effort and hunger control. If totals swing and workouts feel flat, tighten sleep first.

Safety, Growth, And When To Get Help

Energy targets should support growth, training, and a steady mood. Sudden weight change, dizzy spells, or missed periods call for care from a clinician who works with teens. Public pages on nutrition for this life stage also help with food choices; MyPlate keeps an age-aware hub for teens at nutrition information for teens.

Want a deeper primer on energy balance? Try our calories and weight loss guide for a plain walkthrough.