How Many Calories Do You Burn In 1 Hour Jogging? | Tips

One hour of steady jogging burns roughly 470–880 calories depending on body weight and pace.

What Counts As Jogging And Why Burn Ranges Vary

Jogging sits between brisk walking and faster running. Think 4.5–6.0 mph on level ground. Energy use shifts with body mass, pace, incline, wind, surface, temperature, and running economy. That mix explains why two people can do the same loop and see different totals on their watches.

Scientists use metabolic equivalents (METs) to standardize intensity across bodies. A MET is a multiple of resting energy use. The Compendium lists about 7.5 MET for an easy jog and higher values as speed rises; it also provides entries for specific speeds like 5.0 mph and 6.0 mph, which match common training paces (Compendium MET values). Public health groups place jogging in the vigorous band by the “talk test”: you can speak in short phrases but not hold a long chat (CDC talk test).

The Handy Formula That Works

Here’s the standard estimate many coaches use: calories per minute = MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200. For a full hour, multiply that result by 60. In short, an hourly total equals 1.05 × body weight (kg) × the MET that matches your pace. You only need weight in kilograms (pounds ÷ 2.205) and a speed-appropriate MET.

Calories Burned In One-Hour Jogging Sessions: What Changes It

The first table shows steady, level-ground estimates based on common paces. Real-world factors will nudge your number up or down, yet this keeps you in a tight range that’s easy to plan around.

Pace (mph) 60 kg (kcal/hr) 80 kg (kcal/hr)
4.5 (easy jog) 473 630
5.0 (12:00/mi) 536 714
5.5 (10:55/mi) 567 756
6.0 (10:00/mi) 617 823

Snacks and refuels land better once you’ve set your daily calorie needs, then matched runs to those totals.

Where These Values Come From

The speeds above line up with MET entries in the Compendium’s running category for 5.0 mph (about 8.5 MET), 5.5 mph (about 9.0 MET), and 6.0 mph (about 9.8 MET). That framework is widely used in exercise science. For a quick cross-check across body sizes, the American Heart Association’s calorie chart shows similar hourly ranges for aerobic activities (AHA calories per hour).

How Pace, Terrain, And Form Shift The Total

Pace And Short Surges

Speed bumps the MET. Add pick-ups or strides and the minute-by-minute cost climbs. Even with the same overall time, a session with controlled surges usually ends with a bigger total than a fully steady hour.

Grade, Wind, And Surface

A 1% treadmill grade mimics outdoor air resistance. More incline increases energy cost quickly. Headwinds behave like extra grade. Softer trails and grass add a small bump due to lower rebound, while long descents lower the immediate cost but may raise muscle soreness later.

Body Weight, Shoes, And Economy

Heavier runners spend more energy per step. Over months, better mechanics reduce waste at a given speed. Shoe choice influences loading and comfort; rotate pairs if you run often so foam rebounds between sessions.

Practical Hour-Long Setups

Steady Aerobic Hour

Pick an even pace, breathe in short phrases, and keep effort smooth. This is the easiest way to stack weekly time while keeping stress on joints modest.

Progression Session

Start at a relaxed pace and nudge speed every 10–15 minutes. The last quarter should feel brisk but under control. Many runners like this pattern because it teaches patience and ends with a satisfying push.

Hills Or Intervals

Alternate short, firm efforts with equal or slightly longer easy segments. Hills deliver similar benefits with less pounding. Warm up, cool down, and keep reps crisp, not ragged.

Calories Per Mile At Common Training Paces

Another way to look at the math is per mile. Divide the hourly total by speed. Here are estimates for two body weights at familiar paces.

Pace 60 kg (kcal/mi) 80 kg (kcal/mi)
12:00/mi (5.0 mph) 107 143
10:00/mi (6.0 mph) 103 137
9:00/mi (6.7 mph) 99 132

Estimate Your Own Number In Three Steps

Step 1: Pick A MET That Matches Your Pace

Use ~7.5 for an easy jog, ~8.5 for around 5.0 mph, ~9.0 for 5.5 mph, and ~9.8 for 6.0 mph based on Compendium entries. Faster speeds raise the value in small increments.

Step 2: Convert Body Weight To Kilograms

Divide pounds by 2.205. A 176-lb runner is 80 kg; a 132-lb runner is 60 kg.

Step 3: Plug Into The Hourly Formula

Per hour = 1.05 × body weight (kg) × MET. Example: 80 kg at ~5.5 mph (9.0 MET) ≈ 1.05 × 80 × 9 = 756 kcal. For 45 minutes, multiply your per-minute rate by 45 instead.

Safety, Pacing, And Recovery Basics

Build Gradually

Add time in small weekly steps. Most runners do well pairing hard days with easier ones to let tissues adapt.

Fuel And Hydration

Arrive fed for quality sessions. For one hour, many runners can skip mid-run carbs; a small snack helps if you start low. In heat or humidity, drink to thirst and add electrolytes as needed.

Smart Shoes And Routes

Pick shoes that feel stable and comfortable at your typical pace. Rotate pairs if you train often. Mix routes: some flat, some rolling, and a bit of soft surface to spread the load.

Why Watches, Treadmills, And Charts Don’t Match Exactly

Wearables estimate energy from heart rate and pace, then adjust with your profile. Treadmills use speed, grade, and brand formulas. Charts rely on METs from published sources. All are estimates aimed at consistency. Pick one method and track trends over weeks, not single sessions.

Bottom Line

Across body sizes, an hour of steady jogging lands near the ranges in the first table. Use the simple formula to tailor the total to your pace and mass, then pick a session style—steady, progression, or hills—that fits your goals and keeps training fun.

Want a fuller walkthrough of planning intake? Try our daily calorie needs guide.