A 70-kg person burns about 400 calories per hour giving a full-body massage; lighter chair work is nearer 240 and heavy work can reach ~440.
Burn @ 3.3 MET
Burn @ 5.5 MET
Burn @ 6.0 MET
Short Chair Session
- 10–20 min slots
- Forearms & shoulders
- Minimal leg drive
Lower burn
Standard Table Session
- 50–60 min full body
- Standing, weight shift
- Mixed techniques
Mid burn
Deep-Tissue Focus
- Slow, high pressure
- More core engagement
- Short breathers
Higher burn
Calories Burned While Giving A Massage: Realistic Range
Energy use scales with body weight, duration, and how hard you work. The most widely used reference for activity energy cost assigns massage therapist, standing a value of 5.5 MET. That maps to roughly 6.7 kcal per minute for a 70-kg person, or just over 400 kcal in a typical hour.
Quick Reference Table (5.5 MET, Standing Table Work)
The table below shows estimated burn by body weight for 30 and 60 minutes of steady, full-body work.
| Body Weight (kg) | 30 Minutes (kcal) | 60 Minutes (kcal) |
|---|---|---|
| 50 | 144 | 289 |
| 60 | 173 | 347 |
| 70 | 202 | 404 |
| 80 | 231 | 462 |
| 90 | 260 | 520 |
Numbers shift up or down if your pace, stance, or technique changes. If weight loss is the aim, sessions work best alongside a small calorie deficit guide.
What Drives The Number Up Or Down
Body Weight
Heavier bodies burn more per minute at the same MET. That’s built into the math.
Duration
Longer blocks add linearly. A 90-minute table slot is 1.5× your 60-minute burn at the same effort.
Technique & Pressure
Slow, high-pressure work adds core and leg drive. Light chair work sits lower. Standard full-body sessions land in the middle.
Stance & Table Height
Standing with mindful weight shift raises effort, especially if the table is set a touch lower so you can hinge from the hips without shrugging the shoulders.
Room Setup
Spacing that lets you walk around the table without sidestepping keeps you moving, which nudges the burn upward a bit.
How To Estimate Your Burn In Seconds
The Simple Formula
Use this: kcal/min = MET × 3.5 × body-weight (kg) ÷ 200. That’s the standard conversion from oxygen cost to calories, used by the Compendium’s calculator sheets.
Two Quick Examples
Example A: Standard Table Session
Body weight 70 kg, MET 5.5 → 5.5 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 = 6.74 kcal/min ≈ 404 kcal in 60 minutes.
Example B: Light Chair Massage
Body weight 70 kg, MET ~3.3 → 3.3 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 = 4.04 kcal/min ≈ 242 kcal in 60 minutes.
Choosing A Sensible MET For Your Session
For a steady, full-body table session with standing work, use 5.5 MET. For brief chair work or mostly forearm glides with minimal leg drive, a value near 3.0–3.3 makes sense. If your style includes slow, heavy pressure and frequent body-weight transfers, 5.5–6.0 captures that higher end.
Technique Scenarios Compared (For A 70-Kg Therapist)
These scenarios help you map your style to a realistic range. Values use the same formula and widely used reference METs.
| Session Style | Typical MET | 60-Min Calories |
|---|---|---|
| Light Chair Massage | 3.3 | ≈242 kcal |
| Standard Table Work (Standing) | 5.5 | ≈404 kcal |
| Pressure-Heavy Segments | 6.0 | ≈441 kcal |
Practical Tweaks To Manage Effort
To Raise Burn
- Stand, hinge from the hips, and shift weight smoothly.
- Lower the table slightly to engage legs, not just hands.
- Work in short walking arcs rather than leaning across the table.
To Keep Burn Modest
- Use a taller table to reduce knee and hip drive.
- Favor longer glides with less sustained pressure.
- Sprinkle in seated segments for hands-only detail work.
Method & Assumptions
Estimates use the Compendium’s entry for massage therapist, standing at 5.5 MET as the mid case. A lighter case near 3.0–3.3 MET reflects short, low-effort chair work using allied “standing, light/moderate” tasks as a proxy. All math follows the standard MET conversion used in exercise physiology.
Common Questions, Straight Answers
Does Strength Training Raise My Numbers Later?
Stronger legs and better posture make heavier work feel easier. Your measured burn during a session stays tied to effort and duration, not to a hope that strength alone adds calories.
Do Wearables Match These Estimates?
Wrist devices can drift during slow, isometric work. If your tracker reads low during heavy pressure segments, that’s normal. The MET method gives you a consistent cross-check.
Is Giving A Massage “Cardio”?
Average table work lands in the moderate-intensity zone for many adults. If you breathe a bit harder and can talk but not sing during long strokes, you’re in that range.
Smart Way To Use These Numbers
Log your minutes and body weight once, then reuse the same MET for your go-to style. Update the value only if your technique changes in a clear way (chair blocks vs full table days, or a switch to slower, heavier sessions).
One Last Nudge
Want a deeper refresher on intake targets? Try our daily calorie intake basics.