Most adults burn about 2–5 calories doing 25 bodyweight squats, with weight and pace shifting the total.
Slow Tempo
Steady Tempo
Fast Or Jumps
Bodyweight Basics
- Moderate rhythm
- Full range
- Short rests
Everyday set
Weighted Goblet
- 12–16 kg kettlebell
- Braced torso
- 8–12 reps per set
Strength focus
Jump Squats
- Soft landings
- Low reps
- Longer rests
Power burst
Short sets of squats feel easy, yet people want the exact burn. The honest answer is tiny per set, but not zero. A burst of 25 bodyweight reps costs only a few calories, and the total hinges on your body weight, your tempo, and whether you add load or jumps. The numbers below show real estimates and how to lift the burn without wrecking form.
Calories Burned Doing 25 Squats: By Weight And Pace
The simplest way to estimate the calories burned in 25 squats is to use MET values (a standard energy cost for activities) and the time you spend on the set. For steady bodyweight squats, a moderate MET fits; for fast sets or jump squats, a vigorous MET applies. A realistic window for 25 clean reps is about 25–40 seconds at a brisk rhythm and up to 60 seconds if you move slower.
| Body Weight | Steady Pace (≈40s) | Fast Pace (≈25s) |
|---|---|---|
| 125 lb (57 kg) | ~2.5 kcal | ~3.3 kcal |
| 155 lb (70 kg) | ~3.1 kcal | ~4.1 kcal |
| 185 lb (84 kg) | ~3.7 kcal | ~4.9 kcal |
Those totals look small because the set is short. Energy burn tracks minutes for non-loaded moves. Stack sets across a session and the count rises, especially if rests stay brief and reps stay crisp. Planning your day around your daily calorie needs helps you see where quick sets fit without guesswork.
Where The Estimates Come From
These values use the standard MET equation with two common entries for calisthenics: a moderate effort for a steady, controlled set and a vigorous effort for fast or more explosive reps. We pair those with the time a tidy 25-rep set usually takes. If your tempo is slower, the number climbs a little. If you pause between reps, it drops a little.
As a cross-check, public tables of 30-minute calories list values for calisthenics that match these short-set estimates when you scale for time. That keeps the math anchored to measured data, not wishful thinking.
What Changes The Calories In 25 Squats?
Body Weight
Heavier bodies cost more energy to move. Two people using the same tempo and depth will not burn the same number. The table reflects that by scaling the estimate to your body mass.
Tempo And Range
Slow eccentrics and full depth stretch time under tension. That bumps minutes spent and nudges the total up. Fast cycling with clean control pushes the effort toward vigorous, so the MET value rises even if the clock time drops.
Load, Jumps, And Pauses
Holding a kettlebell, wearing a vest, or switching to jump squats increases the work per rep. Pauses at the bottom raise effort too. All of those push the estimate toward the high end.
How We Calculate It
Energy cost is estimated with METs: Calories ≈ MET × 3.5 × body weight in kg ÷ 200 × minutes. You can review that equation on a university page that explains the MET formula. For 30-minute context on common activities, see the Harvard Health table, and for activity intensities used in research estimates, check the Compendium MET values.
Worked Example: 155 Pounds, Steady Pace
Here’s the math for a 155-pound person using a controlled, steady set. First, convert 155 pounds to kilograms: about 70 kg. Next, pick a MET. For a steady bodyweight set, a moderate calisthenics entry works, and 3.8 is commonly used. Now pick a time. A clean set of 25 at a steady rhythm often lands near 40 seconds, or 0.67 minutes.
Step-By-Step
Plug the numbers into the equation: Calories ≈ 3.8 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 × 0.67. The product lands near 3.1 calories. That lines up with the table above.
Fast Set Check
Switch the MET to 8.0 for a quick set and use 25 seconds (0.42 minutes). The math reads 8.0 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 × 0.42, which lands around 4.1 calories. Faster feels tougher, but the set is shorter, so the final number does not jump much.
How To Nudge The Number Up
Add Load Smartly
Hold a kettlebell at chest level, keep your ribs down, and sit between your heels. Pick a weight that lets you keep elbows inside your knees. Two to three sets with tidy breathing raise both stimulus and energy cost.
Use Brief Pauses
Pause for one full second at the bottom. Stay tall, then stand up with intent. That pause turns each rep into more work without making the session feel frantic.
Blend In Jumps
Alternate one bodyweight set with one set of jump squats. Land softly and reset your stance between reps. Keep total rep count controlled so form stays crisp.
When 25 Squats Make Sense
Short sets shine as movement snacks. They wake up legs after desk time, add small bursts of effort on busy days, and help you practice positions before loaded work. They also pair nicely with a macro plan that lines up energy in and out across the week.
Pair With Steps
Use 25 squats as a gate to a short walk. Five minutes of easy strides stacks far more minutes, which matters for energy burn. It also lets knees and hips share load across a fuller range.
Use Them Between Exercises
In a gym setting, place 25 bodyweight squats between upper-body sets. This keeps your heart rate from idling and nudges the total work done in the hour without crowding the main lift.
How Variations Change The Burn
| Variation | Typical Time | Estimated Calories |
|---|---|---|
| Bodyweight, steady | ~40 s | ~3.1 kcal |
| Bodyweight, fast | ~25 s | ~4.1 kcal |
| Jump squats | ~25 s | ~5–6 kcal |
| Goblet squats (12–16 kg) | ~45 s | ~4–6 kcal |
Form Notes That Keep The Math Honest
Depth And Control
Move through a range you own: chest tall, knees tracking, heels grounded. Partial reps shave time, but they also lower the work per rep. Controlled depth makes the estimate more favorable and keeps joints happy.
Breathe And Brace
Inhale on the way down, exhale as you stand. That pacing keeps your trunk stiff and helps you stay steady as the set speeds up.
Stop One Rep Shy Of Sloppy
Chasing speed has a ceiling. The moment your heels lift or your spine wobbles, take a breath or end the set. Clean reps burn better than messy ones.
Realistic Expectations
A quick set of 25 squats won’t erase a dessert. It’s more like flipping on a light than heating a house. The win is repetition across days and weeks. Stack sessions, pair them with walking or cycling, and match food to your goal. That’s where body composition shifts.
Sample 10-Minute Leg Booster
Warm-Up (2 Minutes)
March in place, then do two rounds of five slow squats, five lunges per side, and five hip hinges. Move smoothly.
Work Block (7 Minutes)
Every minute on the minute: 25 squats in 25–40 seconds, then walk or shake out for the rest of the minute. Stop early if form slips.
Cool-Down (1 Minute)
Easy walk and long exhales. If you want more legs, add a second block later in the day instead of forcing speed.
Evidence Backing These Ranges
The Compendium of Physical Activities lists MET values for calisthenics at both moderate and vigorous effort (used for these estimates), and a university explainer lays out the MET-to-calorie equation step by step. Public tables from Harvard Health show 30-minute burns for calisthenics across several weights; when you resize those figures to a 25-rep set, the small, single-digit totals line up neatly.
Bottom Line
Twenty-five squats burn only a handful of calories in one shot. The value sits in repeatable effort, clean form, and smart add-ons like jumps, short rests, or manageable loads. Use short sets as bricks. Build the wall with consistency.
Want a deeper walk-through on pairing training with intake? Try our calorie deficit guide next.