Most 45-minute workouts burn about 200–600 calories depending on body weight, intensity, and activity type.
Effort
Effort
Effort
Low Impact
- Brisk walk or easy spin
- Match your breathing
- Keep joints happy
2–4 METs
Steady Cardio
- Jog, swim, row
- Hold a steady pace
- Short sips of rest
5–8 METs
Power Session
- Intervals or hills
- Short, hard bursts
- Longer recovery
8–12+ METs
Why Calorie Burn Varies Over 45 Minutes
Energy use during a session swings with three levers: body mass, intensity, and the specific activity. A heavier body moves more mass each minute. Harder work raises oxygen demand. Some activities pack more effort into the same time slot.
A handy way to frame intensity is the MET system. One MET reflects quiet rest. Brisk walking, cycling, and running stack higher MET values as pace climbs. The Compendium MET values list typical ranges for hundreds of tasks, from yoga flows to hill repeats. For practical use, the calorie equation is simple: METs × 3.5 × weight in kg ÷ 200 × minutes. That turns a lab idea into usable numbers at home.
Calories Burned During A 45-Minute Session — Typical Ranges
The table below shows estimates for a 45-minute session across common activities at three body weights. These values come from widely used MET ranges and the standard equation. They’re ballpark figures rather than lab measurements, but they help you plan and compare.
| Activity (45 Min) | 56 kg / 125 lb | 70 kg / 154 lb | 84 kg / 185 lb |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hatha yoga (~2.5 METs) | ~110 kcal | ~140 kcal | ~165 kcal |
| Brisk walk 3.5 mph (~4.3 METs) | ~190 kcal | ~235 kcal | ~280 kcal |
| Elliptical easy (~5 METs) | ~225 kcal | ~275 kcal | ~330 kcal |
| Strength circuit, general (~6 METs) | ~270 kcal | ~330 kcal | ~395 kcal |
| Swimming laps, moderate (~6 METs) | ~270 kcal | ~330 kcal | ~395 kcal |
| Rowing machine, moderate (~7 METs) | ~315 kcal | ~385 kcal | ~460 kcal |
| Jog 5 mph (~8.3 METs) | ~375 kcal | ~455 kcal | ~545 kcal |
| Spin class hard (~9 METs) | ~405 kcal | ~495 kcal | ~595 kcal |
| Run 6 mph (~10 METs) | ~450 kcal | ~550 kcal | ~660 kcal |
| HIIT average work (~10–12 METs) | ~450–540 kcal | ~550–660 kcal | ~660–790 kcal |
These estimates assume steady movement. Intervals can raise the average when work bouts are tough and rest is short. If you like objective checks, the CDC’s talk test for moderate vs. vigorous effort is a simple yardstick in the moment; see the CDC intensity guide for plain examples of both levels.
How To Estimate Your Own Number
You can plug in your body weight and a MET value and get a tight estimate in seconds. The math goes like this: calories per minute = MET × 3.5 × kg ÷ 200. Multiply by 45 for a three-quarter hour session. The MET ranges for common activities are published in the Compendium. The equation reflects the standard conversion from oxygen use to energy use in exercise science.
Quick Walkthrough
Say you weigh 70 kg and you jog at a pace often listed near 8.3 METs. Calories per minute ≈ 8.3 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 ≈ 4.77. Over 45 minutes, that’s close to 215 kcal for the first half and 200-plus more for the second, landing near 215 × 2 ≈ 430–480 kcal depending on pace changes and terrain.
Picking A MET Value That Fits
Choose a value that matches your pace or effort. The Compendium lists broad categories like “walking, 3.5 mph,” “running, 6 mph,” or “calisthenics, vigorous.” If your workout mixes moves, take a time-weighted average. That gives a clear estimate without fancy devices.
Dialing In The Variables That Matter
Body Weight And Composition
Energy cost scales with mass moved. Two people doing the same routine for the same time can differ by hundreds of calories. If you train while carrying a pack or pushing a stroller, your “system weight” rises and so does burn.
Intensity, Pace, And Terrain
Pace and hills push the number. A run on a flat track doesn’t match a hilly loop at the same minutes on the clock. The talk test pairs well with your watch: if you can talk in sentences but not sing, you’re around moderate; gasping between short phrases signals vigorous effort per the CDC’s guidance.
Movement Type And Efficiency
Rowing, lap swimming, and steep hiking recruit more muscle groups at once. That often means higher METs for the same time. On the flip side, skilled movers waste less energy at a given pace, which can trim the number slightly.
Plan A 45-Minute Session For Your Goal
Fat Loss Focus
Pick a mode you enjoy and can repeat. Steady cardio near moderate effort plus short surges keeps the average high without frying you. The session below is simple: 10 minutes brisk movement, 4 × 4 minutes strong with 2 minutes easy between, then 7 minutes smooth finish. Stack that two to three times per week with a couple of shorter walks. Fat loss hinges on weekly balance, which links back to your calorie deficit plan. Keep anchors subtle: protein at meals, plenty of produce, and smart snacks.
Cardio Fitness Focus
Keep one day steady near the top of moderate, one day with intervals where breathing gets heavy, and one day easy. Progress comes from small bumps in pace, incline, or resistance. Check your recovery by how quickly breathing settles after a hard bout.
Strength And Muscle Focus
A mixed circuit can fit into 45 minutes and still move the calorie needle. Alternate lower- and upper-body pushes with short rests. Add loaded carries or step-ups for extra transfer to daily life. The calorie number may sit below a hard run, but the training effect reaches beyond the session.
Sample 45-Minute Templates You Can Swap In
Steady Cardio Day
Warm up 6–8 minutes. Hold a pace where you can talk in brief lines. Every 8 minutes, add a 60-second surge, then return to base. Finish with 3–5 minutes easy spin or walk-down.
Intervals Day
Warm up 8 minutes. Do 5 × 3 minutes hard with 2 minutes easy. Keep form clean. End with 5–7 minutes gentle cooldown. This format fits bikes, rowers, treadmills, stairs, or outdoor loops.
Mixed Strength Circuit
Five moves, 45–60 seconds each: squat or hinge, push, row, lunge, core. Rest 60–90 seconds, then repeat 4–6 rounds. Add a 6-minute brisk finisher if you like. Calorie burn tracks with load and density.
How Wearables Compare To MET Math
Watches and rings estimate energy use with heart rate, motion, and your profile. They’re convenient but not perfect. MET math, based on published values and body mass, gives a transparent cross-check. If your device often overshoots or undershoots, split the difference or keep one method for trend tracking.
Intensity labels often confuse people. The CDC lays out clear lists and the talk test for moderate and vigorous activity; see the measuring intensity page. For activity-specific MET ranges, browse the Adult Compendium, then plug numbers into the equation shown earlier.
Common 45-Minute Targets And What They Mean
200–300 Calories
Think easy spin, long walk, relaxed flow yoga, or technique-driven strength work with longer rests. This range suits recovery days and beginners ramping up.
300–450 Calories
Steady cardio at a pace that nudges breathing. Circuit sessions with short rests also land here. It’s a sweet spot for many busy schedules.
450–600+ Calories
Vigorous intervals, hill runs, or hard spin. Demanding, so match it with sleep, hydration, and fueling. Most folks don’t need this every day to see progress.
Intensity Bands And Per-Minute Math
This quick table shows per-minute burn at common intensity bands for a 70 kg person. Multiply by your time to estimate any session length.
| Intensity Band | MET Range | Calories / Minute (70 kg) |
|---|---|---|
| Light Movement | 2.0–2.9 | ~1.2–1.8 |
| Moderate Effort | 4.0–5.9 | ~2.5–3.6 |
| Vigorous Effort | 6.0–10+ | ~4.2–6.1+ |
Smart Ways To Nudge The Number Without Extra Time
Add Mini Hills Or Resistance
A small incline on the treadmill, a higher drag on the rower, or a steeper gear on the bike bumps METs with the same minutes on the clock.
Tighten Rest Windows
Moving from 90-second breaks to 60-second breaks during circuits keeps heart rate elevated and raises your average workload across the session.
Pick Compound Moves
Squats, deadlifts, presses, and rows recruit more muscle at once. That means more oxygen use per minute, which shows up in the calorie math.
Safety, Recovery, And Fuel
Plan at least one easier day between hard sessions. Eat a meal with protein and carbs within a couple of hours when work felt tough. Hydrate before and after. If you take medications or live with a health condition, follow your care team’s advice about intensity bands and progression.
Bring It Together
A three-quarter hour session can do a lot. The burn can sit near 200 with gentle movement or push toward 600 with speed, hills, or dense circuits. Match the mode to your goal, keep a weekly rhythm, and let the numbers guide—not rule—your plan.
Want a structured primer for eating to match your training? Skim our daily nutrition checklist for easy wins.