Workout calories burned vary by activity, intensity, body weight, and time—estimate with MET × body weight (kg) × hours.
Low Burn
Moderate Burn
High Burn
Basic
- Walk 30–45 min
- 2×/week body-weight moves
- Stretch 10 min
Low impact
Better
- Mix jog + bike
- 3×/week strength
- Add intervals
Balanced
Best
- Vigorous cardio days
- Progressive lifting
- Active recovery
High output
Calories Burned During Exercise: Simple Method
All movement uses energy. The fastest way to turn that into a number is with METs (metabolic equivalents). One MET is sitting at rest. A 6-MET activity uses six times that resting rate. The math stays friendly: calories ≈ MET × body weight (kg) × hours. MET values come from lab measurements and field studies and give a shared language across workouts.
Here’s a quick chart using common activities. The estimates use the formula above and reflect 30-minute sessions for two body weights. Real-world results shift with pace, terrain, form, and conditioning.
| Activity | 70 kg | 90 kg |
|---|---|---|
| Walking, Brisk (3.5 mph) | 150 | 194 |
| Running (6 mph) | 343 | 441 |
| Cycling (12–13.9 mph) | 280 | 360 |
| Swimming Laps (Moderate) | 210 | 270 |
| Strength Training (General) | 122 | 158 |
| Rowing Machine (Vigorous) | 298 | 382 |
| Jump Rope | 430 | 554 |
| Yoga (Hatha) | 88 | 112 |
| Elliptical Trainer | 175 | 225 |
Numbers scale with time. Double the minutes, and you’ll roughly double the burn. Pace and effort matter too. The CDC explains intensity with clear examples, including the talk test and sample activities. You can use those cues to pick a level that fits your goals and joints.
Daily energy use sits on top of your diet. Setting a sensible daily calorie intake helps these workout numbers add up in a predictable way. The training plan then acts like the dial: more total minutes and higher METs move the dial up.
What Changes Your Workout Energy Use
Body Weight
Heavier bodies expend more energy to move through the same distance or resist the same load. That’s why the estimate multiplies by kilograms. If you’re tracking progress over months, recalculate as your weight shifts so your plan stays honest.
Intensity And Pace
Speed on the ground or in the pool, grade on a hill or treadmill, and resistance on a bike or rower all push METs upward. The difference can be big: jogging at 5 mph sits near 8 METs while 6 mph lands near 10. Small changes in pace can move you from moderate into vigorous territory.
Duration And Breaks
Short rests during intervals drop average intensity. That’s fine—intervals often feel tougher and can be time-efficient. Just know a 20-minute session with long recoveries won’t match a continuous 20-minute effort on total energy.
Modality And Muscle Mass
Full-body cardio (rower, jump rope, swimming) usually outpaces lower-body-only modes at the same perceived effort. Heavy strength days burn less during the hour than hard cardio, but they add a muscular stimulus that helps keep your resting burn rate steady across the week.
How To Get A Personal Number (In Minutes)
Step 1 — Pick A MET
Match your activity and pace to a MET value. The Compendium lists hundreds of activities and METs. Walking briskly trends near 4–5 METs, steady cycling in the low 8s, lap swimming in the 6–10 range depending on stroke and pace.
Step 2 — Convert Time
Turn minutes into hours. Twenty minutes becomes 0.33; 45 minutes becomes 0.75. Keep the decimals; they make the estimate cleaner.
Step 3 — Multiply
Use calories ≈ MET × body weight (kg) × hours. A 70-kg person jumping rope (12.3 METs) for half an hour: 12.3 × 70 × 0.5 ≈ 430 kcal. Match the same session at 90 kg and you’ll land near 554 kcal.
Training Plans And Total Burn
Weekly totals tell the real story. Think in minutes first, then in MET-minutes, then in calories. Federal guidance calls for 150–300 minutes of moderate work, 75–150 minutes of vigorous work, or a blend across the week, plus muscle-strengthening on two days. See the current recommendations on the Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans. That target helps you shape an output that’s steady and repeatable.
Sample Mix That Hits The Minutes
Here’s a simple blend using common modes. The calories reflect a 70-kg adult and the estimate formula above. Swap in your favorites and re-run the math with your pace and weight.
| Session | Time | Estimated Calories |
|---|---|---|
| Brisk Walk | 45 min | 226 |
| Strength Training | 30 min | 122 |
| Cycling 12–13.9 mph | 15 min | 140 |
| Run 6 mph | 30 min | 343 |
| Swim Laps (Moderate) | 45 min | 315 |
| Yoga (Hatha) | 30 min | 88 |
| Easy Walk | 15 min | 52 |
Strength Work, EPOC, And Myths
What Lifting Burns
General lifting sits near 3–6 METs depending on load, tempo, and rest. That often comes out lower than a hard cardio day during the hour, but the benefits stack: more lean tissue, better force production, stronger bones, and steadier long-term energy use across your week.
About After-Burn
EPOC (excess post-exercise oxygen consumption) does rise after tough sessions. It’s small in the grand total—think a handful of percent on top of the workout itself—and it fades within hours. Bank it as a bonus, not a strategy.
Better Tracking With Three Simple Habits
Log Minutes And Effort
Write down the mode, pace or level, and time. Two lines per workout are plenty. Over a month, you’ll see which blocks drive the biggest output for you.
Cycle Intensities Across The Week
Stacking hard days back-to-back spikes fatigue. A simple rhythm—easy, moderate, hard—keeps the numbers healthy and your legs fresh enough to repeat.
Use Guardrails From Official Guidance
When you’re unsure where a session sits, use the talk test and sample lists from the CDC intensity page. Those cues keep effort honest without fancy equipment.
Quick Reference: Common MET Ranges
Low To Moderate
Easy walking, casual cycling, light calisthenics, easy yoga, light yard work. Expect roughly 2–5 METs depending on pace and load.
Moderate To Vigorous
Brisk walking, steady cycling, elliptical with resistance, water aerobics, many dance classes. These fall near 4–8 METs with common pacing.
Vigorous
Running, lap swimming, jump rope, fast rowing, hard uphill work. These push above 8 METs and can hit double digits at race-style efforts.
Make The Math Work For Your Goal
Weight Loss Or Recomp
Aim for a steady weekly output supported by meals that match your target. Cardio builds the calorie pool; strength keeps muscle on the frame. If you plan your meals, your training output will show up on the scale or tape measure with fewer surprises.
Performance
For runners, cyclists, and swimmers, mileage or time at a given power often matters more than the calorie number. Still, the estimate helps you eat enough to recover from big days.
General Health
Minutes are the win here. Hit the weekly target, sprinkle in two strength days, and stay consistent. You’ll feel the difference in sleep, energy, and mood.
FAQs You Might Expect (Without The Bloat)
Do Wearables Give Accurate Numbers?
They’re fine for trends, not absolute truth. Many devices guess at energy use from heart rate and movement. Treat the readout as a ballpark and cross-check with the MET method for sanity.
Is Fasted Cardio Better For Fat Loss?
Total energy balance across the day matters far more than meal timing. If an empty-stomach session feels good and fits your schedule, go for it; the weekly math rules the outcome.
What If My Pace Varies?
Split the session. If you did 10 minutes easy and 20 minutes hard, run two quick calculations and add them. You’ll get a cleaner estimate than trying to average on the fly.
Want a structured primer that pairs these numbers with meals and habits? Try our calorie deficit guide to tie training output to goals.