Bike riding burns roughly 240–600 calories in 30 minutes, varying by speed, route, and your weight.
Effort
Effort
Effort
Easy Miles
- Flat route, light wind
- Spin at talkable pace
- Short stops allowed
Low burn
Fitness Ride
- Mixed terrain
- Cadence 80–95 rpm
- Minimal coasting
Mid burn
Power Session
- Climbs or intervals
- Hard breathing
- Little recovery
High burn
Calories Burned Riding A Bike: Speed, Weight, Time
Calories burned on two wheels come from three levers: how fast you ride, how much you weigh, and how long you stay on the pedals. Scientists capture the energy cost of each activity as a MET (metabolic equivalent). A higher MET means more oxygen use and a higher burn. Standard energy math converts MET to calories per minute using your weight. This gives practical estimates you can apply to any route.
Measured values for bicycling range widely. A relaxed spin under 10 mph sits near 4 MET. A steady fitness pace around 12–13.9 mph lands near 8 MET. Strong efforts, hills, or racing push well into double digits. These ranges come from the Compendium of Physical Activities, a long-running reference used by health researchers, and align with common 30-minute calorie tables published by major medical outlets.
Quick Reference Table: Pace, MET, And Typical Burn
The table below translates common outdoor paces to MET values and an estimated 30-minute burn for a 70 kg rider (about 154 lb). Use it as a fast baseline, then adjust with the calculator steps that follow.
| Outdoor Pace / Effort | MET | Calories In 30 Minutes (70 kg) |
|---|---|---|
| <10 mph, easy spin | 4.0 | ~245 kcal |
| 10–11.9 mph, casual | 6.0 | ~368 kcal |
| 12–13.9 mph, steady | 8.0 | ~490 kcal |
| 14–15.9 mph, brisk | 10.0 | ~613 kcal |
| 16–19 mph, hard | 12.0 | ~736 kcal |
| >20 mph, very hard | 16.0 | ~981 kcal |
| Hilly route, frequent climbs | 12–16 | ~736–981 kcal |
| Mountain biking, general | 8.5 | ~521 kcal |
| Stationary bike, vigorous | 10–12 | ~613–736 kcal |
Once you pick a baseline, you can fine-tune the number with your weight and ride time. If your training goal is fat loss, keep an eye on your calorie deficit across the whole day, not only the ride.
How To Estimate Your Personal Burn
Here’s the method used by fitness pros and researchers. Grab the MET for your pace, plug in your body weight, then multiply by minutes on the bike. That’s it. No power meter required.
The MET Equation In Plain Terms
Calories per minute = MET × 3.5 × weight(kg) ÷ 200. Multiply that result by ride minutes to get total calories. MET values for bicycling by speed come from the Compendium of Physical Activities; the equation is the standard way to convert MET to energy use reported in kcal.
Worked Example (Steady Fitness Ride)
Say you rode 45 minutes at about 13 mph and weigh 70 kg.
- Pick MET: steady pace ≈ 8 MET.
- Calories per minute: 8 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 = 9.8 kcal/min.
- Total for 45 minutes: 9.8 × 45 ≈ 441 kcal.
Two riders on the same route won’t match if their weights differ. A 90 kg cyclist at the same pace would land closer to 567 kcal for 45 minutes using the same steps.
What Changes The Number
Wind and grade. A headwind or climb bumps MET up. Tailwinds and long descents drop it.
Stops and coasting. Traffic lights and soft-pedaling lower the average.
Bike type and rolling resistance. Knobby tires, heavy bikes, gravel, and sand raise the energy cost.
Position and clothing. Tall posture and loose layers catch air; a tucked position reduces drag.
Group riding. Drafting saves energy, so solo rides often burn more at the same speed.
Picking Your Pace With Common Targets
If you want a specific calorie target, use this guide to match pace and time. Numbers assume a 70 kg rider on mostly flat roads. Adjust up if you’re heavier or climbing, and adjust down if you’re smaller, sheltered from wind, or on a trainer with low resistance.
Typical Goals And Realistic Ranges
- 300–400 kcal: 25–35 minutes at a steady 12–14 mph.
- 500–650 kcal: 40–60 minutes around 14–16 mph or with rolling hills.
- 800–1,000+ kcal: 60–90 minutes with sustained climbs or a brisk group ride.
Intensity Cues You Can Feel
Not sure if you’re in the right zone? Use the talk test and breathing. At a relaxed pace, you can speak in full sentences. At a steady training pace, you can say short phrases. At hard efforts, only a few words come out before you need air. These cues map well to the MET ranges used in calorie math and help you choose a sustainable workload for the day.
Sample Calculator: One Pace, Three Weights
Here’s how weight shifts totals for a common outdoor pace. Same route, same wind, same minutes—different riders land on different burns. Values use the MET equation and a 30-minute window.
| Duration | 12–13.9 mph (~8 MET) | 14–15.9 mph (~10 MET) |
|---|---|---|
| 30 min at 60 kg | ~420 kcal | ~525 kcal |
| 30 min at 75 kg | ~525 kcal | ~656 kcal |
| 30 min at 90 kg | ~630 kcal | ~788 kcal |
| 45 min at 70 kg | ~441 kcal | ~551 kcal |
| 60 min at 70 kg | ~588 kcal | ~735 kcal |
Outdoor Rides Versus Stationary Sessions
On a trainer, the terrain variable disappears, yet resistance settings can swing totals. A light spin at low resistance may sit near leisure levels. A structured interval set often looks like a brisk outdoor ride in both breathing and energy cost. Match the feel: if your breathing lands in the “short phrases only” zone, you’re in that mid-to-high MET band even indoors.
Power Meters And Heart Rate
Power in watts gives a direct window into work. Average 150–200 W for an hour and you’ll land near the mid ranges in the tables. Heart rate is a useful cross-check when power isn’t available. Long plateaus in the upper aerobic zone usually line up with steady, sustainable MET levels, while sharp peaks mark surges that push totals up.
Three Simple Ways To Raise Burn (Without Overdoing It)
Add gentle elevation. Choose a route with a few rolling hills instead of a pancake-flat loop.
Trim idle time. Plan a loop with fewer lights and smoother crossings so you keep the pedals turning.
Use short surges. Sprinkle in 5–8 hard efforts of 30–60 seconds with plenty of easy spinning between them.
Fueling And Recovery Basics
Under-fueling before a hard session makes the pace feel tougher and can lower total work. A light snack with some carbohydrate 30–60 minutes before a mid-length ride helps you hold the target zone. Post-ride, a mix of fluid, protein, and carbs speeds up recovery so tomorrow’s ride feels steady again. Salt and water needs rise on hot, windy days, so watch thirst and sweat rate.
Safety Notes That Also Affect Burn
Traffic and visibility. Daytime running lights and bright clothing let drivers see you sooner. Smooth line choices save energy and keep you safer near curbs and parked cars.
Tire pressure. Under-inflated tires add rolling drag and bump the workload. Check pressures weekly, especially before longer rides.
Fit and comfort. A stable saddle height and neutral reach reduce wasted motion. If your hips rock or your hands go numb, the setup may be stealing watts and adding fatigue.
Make The Numbers Yours
Use the quick table to pick a starting MET, run the equation with your weight, and jot a few real-world rides with weather and terrain notes. After two or three weeks, you’ll see your own pattern emerge, which is far more useful than any one-size chart.
Two Closing Tips
- Keep pace bands honest. If you ride mostly into a headwind or up a steady grade, slide to the next higher MET.
- Anchor your training to feel as well as math. The talk test keeps you from drifting too easy or too hard.
Where These Numbers Come From
MET values for bicycling by speed, terrain, and style are cataloged in the Compendium of Physical Activities. Calorie tables from major medical publishers convert those METs to 30-minute burns for common body weights. Together, they give practical, transparent ranges you can adapt to any bike and any day.
Want a longer read on intake targets to pair with your rides? Try our daily calorie intake guide.