Most people burn about 170–470 calories per hour painting walls, depending on body weight and effort.
Light Indoor
Ladder/Fence
Exterior Work
Basic Setup
- Steady pace, rolling walls
- Short breaks every 45 min
- Minimal ladder time
Easiest
Efficiency Mode
- Cut first, roll in sections
- Alternate arms to reduce fatigue
- Bundle cleanup once
Balanced
Calorie-Heavy Mode
- Include trim, doors, ceiling
- More ladder intervals
- Fewer idle pauses
Highest Burn
Calorie Burn While Painting Walls — The Fast Way To Estimate
Energy use while repainting a room lines up with a simple formula used in exercise science: per-minute calories = MET × 3.5 × weight(kg) ÷ 200. Multiply by 60 for an hourly number. Room work such as rolling and cutting in typically sits near 3.3 METs according to the Compendium of Physical Activities, while outdoor surfaces or fence work range higher.
Quick Reference Table (Per Hour)
The table below uses standard MET values for common scenarios and shows per-hour burn at different body weights.
| Body Weight | Interior Walls (3.3 METs) | Exterior Surfaces (5.0 METs) |
|---|---|---|
| 50 kg (110 lb) | ~173 kcal | ~262 kcal |
| 60 kg (132 lb) | ~208 kcal | ~315 kcal |
| 70 kg (154 lb) | ~243 kcal | ~368 kcal |
| 80 kg (176 lb) | ~277 kcal | ~420 kcal |
| 90 kg (198 lb) | ~312 kcal | ~472 kcal |
Numbers assume a steady pace with regular rolling and brush work. Targets land better once you set your daily calorie needs so you can plan snacks and breaks to match the project.
Why Estimates Vary From Room To Room
Two rooms, same person, different totals. That’s normal. Several dials move the calorie tally up or down.
Body Weight
Heavier bodies use more energy at the same intensity because there’s more mass to move. Plug your weight into the formula and you’ll see a linear change: double the weight, you roughly double the per-minute burn.
Pace And Technique
Short, choppy strokes and frequent stops reduce output. Long rolling passes, smooth transitions between cut and roll, and fewer idle pauses keep the heart rate in a steady zone. The MET stays closer to that 3.3–4.5 band rather than drifting lower.
Ladder Time And Overhead Work
Edges near ceilings, high trims, and door frames add reaching and stepping. That bumps intensity toward 4.5 METs. More clamp-downs on the ladder? Expect a higher total by the end of the day.
Room Size, Coats, And Dry Time
A 12×12 bedroom with standard height walls is a different beast than an open-plan living area. Bigger spaces and extra coats stretch the clock, which lifts the total calories even if the hourly rate stays the same.
Ventilation, Breaks, And Hydration
Fresh air and smart rest breaks matter. Follow healthy indoor painting practices to keep air clean while you work. Sip water during resets to keep pace steady through the second coat.
Use The MET Formula To Get Your Number
Here’s the straightforward path to a personal estimate you can trust for wall work.
Step 1 — Pick The Scenario
Use 3.3 METs for interior walls with standard rolling and brush work. If your plan involves frequent ladder moves or heavy trim, use 4.5. Working outdoors on siding or large exterior surfaces? Use 5.0.
Step 2 — Do The Math
Per-minute calories = MET × 3.5 × weight(kg) ÷ 200. Multiply by the minutes you’ll actually spend moving. A 70-kg painter at 3.3 METs burns about 3.3 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 ≈ 4.0 kcal/min. One hour lands near 240 kcal.
Step 3 — Tally The Session
Estimate the minutes for each task: taping, cutting in, rolling, ladder work, cleanup. Add them up and multiply by the matching MET. That basket-style sum gives a practical total for the room.
Room Example: One 12×12 Bedroom
This sample plan uses a steady solo pace. Adjust the minutes to match your speed and the number of coats.
| Task | Time (min) | Calories (70 kg) |
|---|---|---|
| Prep & Taping (3.3 METs) | 25 | ~101 |
| Cutting-In Edges (3.3 METs) | 35 | ~141 |
| Rolling First Coat (3.3 METs) | 40 | ~162 |
| Ladder & Trim Work (4.5 METs) | 15 | ~83 |
| Cleanup & Resets (3.3 METs) | 15 | ~61 |
| Second Coat (3.3 METs) | 60 | ~243 |
Total for this plan: about 790 calories across ~3 hours and 10 minutes for a 70-kg person. If two people share the work, personal totals drop while the room finishes sooner.
How To Raise The Burn Without Slowing The Job
Work In Blocks
Cut one full wall, then roll it right away. That pattern cuts idle time and keeps heart rate from dipping between tasks.
Alternate Sides
Switch brush hands on straight runs and use two-handed rolling on tall surfaces. You get smoother coverage and more upper-body involvement.
Build In Short, Smart Breaks
Pause for two to three minutes between walls for water and setup. Short resets beat long sit-downs, keeping intensity in the moderate zone. The CDC talk test is handy: you should be able to speak in sentences, not sing.
Add Extra Surfaces
Doors, baseboards, and window trim add reaching and fine control. That nudges the session toward the 4.5 MET range.
Common Questions, Straight Answers
Is This The Same As A Gym Workout?
Not quite. The effort sits in the moderate range for most people, similar to a brisk walk. It’s steady and practical, and it adds up across a long session.
Do Stairs Change The Total?
Yes, when the project spans multiple floors. Hauling paint and tools upstairs increases effort. The work chunk that involves stairs will push above 3.3 METs while you’re moving gear.
What About Rolling Ceilings?
Overhead rolling brings extra shoulder and core work. Expect a higher hourly number, closer to 4.5 METs, during those stretches.
Safety And Pace Matter
Good prep makes the day smoother and safer. Ventilate rooms, keep lids on trays during breaks, and clear the floor around ladders. The U.S. EPA’s guidance on healthy indoor painting practices covers simple steps like window fans and short post-paint airing.
Two Fast Methods To Estimate Your Total
Back-Of-The-Envelope
Pick your scenario (3.3, 4.5, or 5.0 METs), multiply by 1.05 and your weight (kg), and you’ve got an hourly number. Multiply by hours on task and you’re done.
Task-By-Task
List tasks with minutes. Use 3.3 for general wall work and 4.5 for ladder or overhead time. Multiply and add. This method matches real-world stop-and-go flow and gives a tighter estimate for large rooms.
Nutrition Handy Notes For Painting Days
Light snacks beat heavy meals while you’re on a ladder. Aim for water, some carbs, and a pinch of sodium during long sessions. Keep a small bottle nearby. You’ll move better and finish with fewer dips in energy.
Want a simple low-impact way to stay active between projects? Try our walking for health tips.