How Many Calories Do You Burn Hiking For 3 Hours? | Quick Trail Math

A 3-hour hike burns roughly 800–1,900 calories depending on body weight, terrain, pace, and pack load.

Calories Burned On A 3-Hour Hike: Factors That Move The Needle

Calorie burn climbs with body weight, trail grade, speed, and any pack you carry. That’s because hiking intensity is described in METs (metabolic equivalents). One MET reflects quiet sitting; higher METs mean higher energy use, which the CDC explains in plain terms with the talk test and intensity ranges (CDC intensity & METs).

The Compendium of Physical Activities lists common hiking cases from gentle ambling at 3.8 MET to cross-country hiking at 6.0 MET and steep hill work near 8.5–10.0 MET depending on load and grade (Compendium MET entries). Using those ranges gives reliable ballpark numbers.

Quick Estimates By Weight And Terrain (3 Hours)

Use this table to match your weight and the trail feel. “Easy” = steady, rolling paths; “Typical” = mixed terrain with some climbs; “Steep/Loaded” = long climbs or added weight.

Body Weight Easy Trail
(~3.8 MET)
Steep/Loaded
(~8.5 MET)
120 lb ~650 kcal ~1,460 kcal
150 lb ~810 kcal ~1,820 kcal
180 lb ~980 kcal ~2,190 kcal
210 lb ~1,140 kcal ~2,550 kcal
240 lb ~1,300 kcal ~2,920 kcal

Method: calories = MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200 × minutes. Minutes here = 180. The “Typical trail” (~6.0 MET) usually lands between the two columns for most hikers.

These ranges sit alongside your daily calorie burn, so a long outing can create a clear energy gap to refill later.

How To Estimate Your Own Number With METs

Grab two inputs: an intensity (MET) and your body weight. Hiking options from the Compendium look like this:

  • Hiking, cross-country: ~6.0 MET
  • Hiking slowly through fields/hillsides: ~3.8 MET
  • Climbing hills, no load, steep grade: ~8.5 MET
  • Climbing hills with 20+ lb pack: ~10.0 MET

Now plug into the standard formula: calories = MET × 3.5 × weight(kg) ÷ 200 × minutes. This is the standard conversion used in exercise physiology teaching and tools, and it aligns with public health explanations of intensity in METs (CDC intensity & METs).

Worked Example

A 150-lb hiker (68.0 kg) on a “typical trail” at ~6.0 MET for 180 minutes: 6.0 × 3.5 × 68.0 ÷ 200 × 180 ≈ ~1,290 calories. A steeper route at ~8.5 MET would land near ~1,820 calories over the same time.

What Pushes Numbers Up Or Down

Body Weight

Heavier bodies expend more energy for the same task. That’s why two hikers moving together see different totals even with the same pace and trail.

Grade And Elevation Gain

Long grades push effort into vigorous territory. The Compendium lists hill climbing without a load at roughly 8.5 MET, and values can climb with steeper grades. Expect bigger swings on switchback-heavy routes.

Speed And Stops

Steady 2–3 mph on dirt with short photo breaks usually sits in the middle range. Long, frequent stops trim the total; power hiking pushes it up.

Pack Weight

Water, layers, and snacks matter. A 10–20 lb pack often nudges effort to ~6.5 MET; 20+ lb with moderate grades can reach ~10.0 MET based on Compendium categories.

Surface And Footing

Rock gardens, sand, snow, or slick roots add small spikes. Smooth, packed paths cost less per minute.

Heat, Altitude, And Dehydration

Hot days, thin air, and low fluids raise perceived strain. Keep sipping and pacing, especially on climbs. The talk test is a handy check: if you can talk but not sing you’re around moderate intensity; short phrases only means vigorous—straight from CDC descriptions (CDC talk test).

Trail Scenarios In Numbers

Here’s how common hiking scenarios map to calories for a 180-lb hiker over 3 hours. Use it to size your snacks and pace.

Scenario MET 3-Hour Calories
(180 lb)
Ambling, gentle terrain 3.8 ~980 kcal
Normal pace through hillsides 5.3 ~1,360 kcal
Cross-country hiking 6.0 ~1,540 kcal
10–20 lb pack, 5–10% grade 6.5 ~1,670 kcal
Steep hills, no load 8.5 ~2,190 kcal
20+ lb pack, 5–20% grade 10.0 ~2,570 kcal

Values pull directly from the Compendium’s hiking and hill-climb entries, which categorize terrain and load with clear METs. That makes it easy to move beyond vague “easy vs hard” labels.

Fuel, Water, And Pacing For A 3-Hour Outing

Food Timing

Plan a steady trickle of carbs and a little protein. A sandwich split in halves, fruit, and a handful of salty crackers keep energy steady across three hours. If your route trends toward the right side of the card (steep/loaded), add an extra snack.

Hydration

Bring at least 1.5–2.0 liters for temperate weather. Warm days or big climbs call for more. Small, regular sips beat big gulps when you’re out of breath.

Electrolytes

On sweaty routes, rotate some sports drink or carry simple electrolyte tablets. Salt helps retention and keeps cramps in check.

Pacing Cues

Breathe through the nose on flats, aim for talk-in-short-phrases on climbs, and shorten your stride on loose rock. Slowing 10% on steep grades often pays back with fewer long stops—net time stays similar and the calorie total ends up close.

Plan, Track, And Adjust

Pre-Hike Setup

  • Pick a route with known elevation gain so you can choose the right MET line.
  • Weigh your daypack; a few pounds swing the category.
  • Set a steady pace window (2–3 mph on dirt works for most groups).

During The Hike

  • Use landmarks or hour marks for quick snack checks.
  • Pause briefly on climbs instead of long stand-stills to keep overall pace even.
  • Note how the talk test feels on different grades; it’s a good proxy for your MET zone.

After You’re Back

  • Rehydrate, then eat a simple carb-plus-protein meal within an hour.
  • Log the route, grade feel, and pack weight so next time’s estimate is even tighter.
  • If fat loss is on your radar, align hike days with a small weekly deficit on non-hike days.

Answers To The Most Common “But What About…”

Poles, Boots, And Shoes

Trekking poles add a small upper-body share and can raise effort on climbs, yet they often let you move steadier. Heavier boots raise cost on long days; lightweight hikers or trail shoes usually cut a little energy per mile.

Altitude And Heat

High altitude and hot weather bump strain. Expect a slower pace and more sips, then adjust your estimate toward the higher MET line for the same route.

Stop-And-Go Hiking

Long photo breaks lower the total. A good rule: if your group stops often, use the “Easy” or “Normal” scenario even on hilly terrain.

Bring It All Together

Pick a MET that matches the route and pack, multiply by your weight and time, and you’ll land in the right ballpark for a three-hour outing. Want a deeper fat-loss plan to pair with trail days? Try our calorie deficit guide.