How Many Calories Do I Burn Cleaning House? | Home Sweat Math

Cleaning tasks burn roughly 150–450 calories per hour, depending on body weight and how hard you work.

If you’re counting movement outside the gym, chores are a handy win. You’re lifting, reaching, pushing, and walking rooms end-to-end. The burn is modest with light tasks and climbs fast once you add a brisk pace, stairs, or scrubbing on hands and knees.

Calorie Burn While Cleaning The House: What Changes It

Three levers drive the number: body weight, time on task, and intensity. Scientists describe intensity with metabolic equivalents (METs). Light chores sit around 2–3 METs; steady cleaning lands near 3–4; demanding sets like hard scrubbing or carrying boxes can jump to 6–9. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention classifies 3–5.9 METs as moderate and 6.0+ as vigorous activity, which is where deep scrubs and stair carries often land. See the CDC’s primer on MET intensity if you want the quick definitions.

The Compendium of Physical Activities lists MET values for day-to-day tasks. That includes sweeping, mopping, vacuuming, window cleaning, bed making, laundry, organizing, and more. Those values let you estimate your own totals with a simple rule: calories ≈ MET × body weight (kg) × hours. The next table puts common chores on one page so you can scan fast and plan a session that fits your pace.

Common Chores And Estimated Burn (Per 30 Minutes)

Two sample body weights shown. Scale up or down proportionally with your own weight and the time you spend.

Chore (MET) 60 kg / 30 min 80 kg / 30 min
Vacuuming (3.0) ~90 kcal ~120 kcal
Sweeping, General (3.3) ~99 kcal ~132 kcal
Sweeping, Fast Pace (3.8) ~114 kcal ~152 kcal
Mopping, Moderate (3.5) ~105 kcal ~140 kcal
Windows, General (3.3) ~99 kcal ~132 kcal
Dusting/Polishing (2.5) ~75 kcal ~100 kcal
Making Bed (3.0) ~90 kcal ~120 kcal
Laundry, Moderate (4.0) ~120 kcal ~160 kcal
Scrubbing Floors, Moderate (3.5) ~105 kcal ~140 kcal
Scrubbing Floors, Vigorous (6.5) ~195 kcal ~260 kcal
Organizing A Room (4.8) ~144 kcal ~192 kcal
Moving Furniture (5.8) ~174 kcal ~232 kcal

Totals change fast once you stack chores in a loop. Ten minutes of vacuuming, ten minutes of mopping, and ten minutes of windows at a steady clip lands near the mid column above for a half-hour block. That can be a tidy chunk of your daily calorie burn before any “workout” starts.

Build A Session That Fits Your Day

Short on time? Pick two tasks and set a simple timer. Got an hour? Run a room-by-room circuit. The goal is steady movement with a rhythm you can keep. Here’s a practical blueprint that scales to any home.

Minute-By-Minute Circuit (40–60 Minutes)

  • Warm start, 5 min: Clear surfaces and gather gear. Light walking and reaching wakes the body up.
  • Floor block, 15–20 min: Vacuum carpets, then switch to mopping for hard floors. Keep strides snappy, shoulders relaxed.
  • Surfaces, 10–15 min: Counters, table, door handles, switches. Use both hands where it makes sense.
  • Bathroom, 10–15 min: Tackle sink and tub. A firm scrub raises the needle into a higher range.
  • Quick reset, 5 min: Trash out, laundry in, tools back.

Prefer bite-size blocks? Stack two 15-minute sprints—one early, one later. You’ll end up with similar totals without a long stretch on your feet.

Deep Clean Versus Tidy-Up: Sample Combos

Tidy-up (30 minutes): 10 min vacuum (3.0), 10 min dusting (2.5), 10 min kitchen wipe-down (3.3). A 60 kg person lands near 90 + 75 + 99 ≈ 264 kcal per hour pace, so ~130 kcal for this half-hour. A 80 kg person sits near ~173 kcal.

Deep scrub (60 minutes): 20 min bathroom scrub (6.5), 20 min organizing (4.8), 20 min mopping (3.5). That’s a higher workload: for 60 kg, the hourly rate averages near 4.93 MET; call it ~296 kcal for the hour. At 80 kg, that rises to ~395 kcal. Add stairs or box carries and the number climbs further.

Where The Numbers Come From

The estimates above use standard MET values from the Adult Compendium of Physical Activities. You’ll find entries for each task, such as vacuuming (3.0), sweeping (3.3–3.8), mopping (3.5), window cleaning (3.3), laundry at moderate effort (4.0), organizing a room (4.8), and scrubbing floors (3.5–6.5). Those values are multiplied by your body weight in kilograms and the hours spent to estimate calories. The CDC classifies 3–5.9 MET work as moderate and 6+ as vigorous, which matches how these chores feel once you pick up speed.

If you prefer another cross-check, Harvard Health publishes a chart that lists calories for common activities at three body weights. It lines up closely with MET math for everyday movement. For structured movement targets, the World Health Organization recommends adults reach about 150 minutes of moderate activity weekly, which your housekeeping blocks can help meet. See WHO’s guidance on weekly activity minutes for the full picture.

Quick Planner Table: One-Hour Burn By Intensity

Pick an intensity that matches your pace. Numbers are estimates based on MET ranges common to household tasks.

Intensity (Typical MET) 60 kg / 60 min 80 kg / 60 min
Light (≈2.5) ~150 kcal ~200 kcal
Moderate (≈3.5) ~210 kcal ~280 kcal
Vigorous (≈6.5) ~390 kcal ~520 kcal

Simple Ways To Nudge The Burn Up

Keep A Brisk Rhythm

The quickest lever is pace. Shorten your steps a touch, keep turns tight, and move tools with purpose. A steady rhythm bumps many tasks from the low column into the middle range without feeling wild.

Make The Most Of Stairs

If you’ve got stairs, load items into a basket and take purposeful trips. A few flights lift the session into a higher band, similar to stair carries listed in activity tables.

Alternate Muscle Groups

Swap upper-body scrubbing with lower-body sweeping. Alternating lets you push a little harder without fading, which keeps your average higher across the block.

Add Small Loads Smartly

Carry a box or a bundled bag for short distances. Even a minute or two of loaded walking moves the needle closer to the “vigorous” band.

Use A Timer

Try 10-minute sets with a one-minute reset. This keeps you moving and trims idle gaps. You’ll end up closer to the moderate numbers shown earlier.

Safety And Comfort Matter

Warm hands and shoulders before a scrub session. Keep your spine neutral when lifting, and hinge at the hips for low reaches. If you feel pain, back off the tempo and stick to lighter tasks while you recover.

Hydrate, crack a window for airflow if cleaning products are in play, and use gloves for long scrubs. You’ll last longer and feel better afterward.

How To Personalize Your Estimate

Step 1: Pick Your Tasks

List what you’ll do and for how long. Borrow METs from the Compendium entries that match your chores. You don’t need every minute perfect—close matches work well for planning.

Step 2: Do The Quick Math

Turn your weight into kilograms (pounds ÷ 2.205). Multiply MET × kilograms × hours. That’s your rough calorie total. Example: a 70 kg person spending 30 minutes on a 3.5-MET mop session is 3.5 × 70 × 0.5 ≈ 122 kcal.

Step 3: Adjust For Pace

If you coasted, pick the lower MET in the range. If you broke a sweat and your breathing was deeper, bump it to the next line. The CDC page on METs gives plain cues for what “moderate” and “vigorous” feel like in real life.

Quick Clarifications

Do Devices And Apps Match These Numbers?

Wearables estimate burn with heart-rate trends and motion data. Some undercount when your hands are still (think scrubbing with one arm braced) and overcount when your arms swing a lot. Treat their totals as a cousin to the MET method, not a verdict.

Is “Cooking” Exercise?

Light prep clocks in near 2–2.5 METs and won’t move the needle much. A vigorous session where you’re walking, lifting, and cleaning as you go can creep toward the middle band, especially if you’re on your feet for an hour.

Does Music Help?

Up-tempo playlists often lift cadence. Many people find they cover more ground in the same time window, which nudges the average intensity.

Make Housework Count All Week

Use chore blocks to help you reach the weekly movement target. Adults aiming for around 150 minutes of moderate activity can piece that together with short sessions, walks, and a couple of deeper cleans. If you want a gentler add-on between chore days, a simple nudge is walking for health.

Sources And Method Notes

The MET values for household tasks come from the Adult Compendium of Physical Activities’ “Home Activities” list, which includes sweeping, mopping, window cleaning, vacuuming, laundry at different efforts, organizing a room, scrubbing floors, and more. Classification of moderate and vigorous intensity follows the CDC’s MET bands. Weekly activity targets follow WHO guidance for adults. For a cross-check with calories at three common body weights, Harvard Health’s chart provides similar estimates for everyday activities.