How Many Calories Do You Burn In A Tennis Match? | Match-Day Math

In a typical 60-minute singles tennis match, most players burn roughly 500–750 calories, with weight and pace driving the range.

Match energy cost swings with weight, pace, and downtime between points. The fastest way to ballpark your number is a simple formula combined with a few tennis-specific MET values that researchers use for energy tracking.

Calories Burned Playing Tennis: Singles Vs Doubles

Scientists express exercise intensity as METs. One MET equals resting energy use; tennis ranges from about 6–8 METs for most adults, depending on pace and format. Current Compendium entries list tennis, singles at 8.0 MET and tennis, doubles at 6.0 MET, with “general, moderate effort” near 6.8 MET. These standardized values let you turn body weight and minutes on court into an estimate of calories burned. See the current sports table.

The Quick Formula

kcal = MET × 3.5 × kg ÷ 200 × minutes. That’s the same method used in many exercise studies and calculators. It matches real-world numbers you’ll see from wearables when the match pace is steady.

Broad Estimates For A One-Hour Match

The table below uses the formula with 8.0 MET for singles and 6.0 MET for doubles. Your result rises with weight and drops with longer breaks between points.

Estimated Calories In 60 Minutes (By Weight)
Body Weight Singles • 8.0 MET Doubles • 6.0 MET
55 kg (121 lb) ≈ 462 kcal ≈ 346 kcal
65 kg (143 lb) ≈ 546 kcal ≈ 409 kcal
75 kg (165 lb) ≈ 630 kcal ≈ 472 kcal
85 kg (187 lb) ≈ 714 kcal ≈ 535 kcal
95 kg (209 lb) ≈ 798 kcal ≈ 598 kcal

Some players like to cross-check these outputs against broader activity tables. Harvard Health maintains a long-running chart showing calories burned for many sports across three body weights; tennis lines land close to the estimates above. Here’s the relevant page for a quick comparison: calories burned in 30 minutes.

If you track weight change over time, you’ll also care about total daily burn outside the court. A steady picture of calories burned every day helps you judge match days vs rest days without guesswork.

What Changes The Number During A Match

Two matches with the same score can tell different stories for energy cost. Here’s what pushes the total up or down during play.

Rally Length And Point Density

Longer rallies raise average intensity. Short deuce games with back-to-back serves leave more idle time. If you love to serve-and-volley and finish points quickly, your hourly burn may sit under the mid-range.

Court Coverage

Singles pulls you side-to-side and forward-back. Doubles trims distance per player and introduces more rests. Competitive doubles with tight net play still climbs on the meter, just not as fast as a physical singles set.

Surface And Conditions

Clay extends points and keeps you moving. Hard courts can shorten exchanges, especially with big serves. Heat and humidity add strain and nudge heart rates higher, which can tilt the estimate upward.

Ability And Style

A counter-puncher who chases everything usually racks up more steps than a big-serve, short-point specialist. Footwork habits and recovery time between points matter just as much as speed.

How To Estimate Your Match Calories Accurately

You can get a closer reading with either a heart-rate wearable or the MET formula plus your match time. Both benefit from clean inputs.

Using The MET Formula Step-By-Step

  1. Pick a MET that fits your day. Use 8.0 for singles at a steady pace; pick 6.0 for relaxing doubles; slide toward 6.8–7.5 for in-between days.
  2. Convert weight to kilograms. Pounds ÷ 2.2046 gives kg.
  3. Multiply: MET × 3.5 × kg ÷ 200 × minutes. That gives calories for your full session.
  4. Adjust if your match had long rests. Trim 5–10% when there were delays or ball searches.

Using Heart-Rate Sensors

Chest straps read more cleanly during quick changes than wrist sensors. Set your device to “tennis” so it doesn’t smooth out spikes. If your watch asks for zones, use the CDC’s plain check: speech broken into a few words at a time usually lands in a vigorous range. The CDC outlines simple ways to judge intensity with a talk test and a 0–10 effort scale on its measuring intensity page.

Match Length Matters More Than You Think

Sixty minutes is a common yardstick, but two sets can run longer with tight games. Use the second table to scale your total based on minutes played at a typical club pace vs a faster pace.

Calories By Match Length (75 kg Player)
Duration Club Pace • 6.8 MET Singles Pace • 8.0 MET
30 minutes ≈ 268 kcal ≈ 315 kcal
60 minutes ≈ 536 kcal ≈ 630 kcal
90 minutes ≈ 803 kcal ≈ 945 kcal

Singles, Doubles, Drills: Picking The Right MET

Not every session looks like match play. Here are handy MET choices pulled from the current Compendium entries for tennis:

  • Singles match: 8.0 MET
  • Doubles match: 6.0 MET (drop toward 4.5 for laid-back sets)
  • General, moderate effort: 6.8 MET
  • Hitting balls, non-game: 5.0 MET

If your match looked like high-tempo drills or had lots of serve practice, shift to the closest entry. The Compendium page lists all codes in one place for quick reference.

How This Compares To Other Cardio

Singles at a steady clip lands near a treadmill jog in energy cost for many adults. Doubles sits closer to brisk cycling. Racket sports also layer in lateral moves and short sprints, so the strain pattern feels different from steady-state cardio.

Practical Tips To Tune Burn Without Losing Fun

Stretch Rallies, Not Sessions

Work on consistency to add a few shots to each point. Longer rallies lift the average more than simply booking an extra half hour of light hitting.

Shorten Breaks Between Points

Keep a playable pace. Ball kids aren’t required; a small stash of balls in your pocket cuts dead time nicely.

Rotate Surfaces

If you train on hard courts, mix in clay from time to time. Extended points keep you moving and sharpen recovery.

Mind Hydration And Heat

Dehydration drags down pace and can make effort feel harder than it is. Bring fluids and sip on changeovers. In hot weather, add electrolytes and plan shorter sets.

Worked Examples You Can Copy

Example 1: One-Hour Singles, 70 kg

Use 8.0 MET. Math: 8.0 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 × 60 = 588 kcal. Tight games or a tiebreak can nudge this up.

Example 2: Ninety Minutes Of Doubles, 85 kg

Use 6.0 MET. Math: 6.0 × 3.5 × 85 ÷ 200 × 90 = 802 kcal. Shift down toward 4.5 MET if the set was stop-start.

Safety And Intensity Cues

New to the sport or returning after a break? Start with doubles and shorter sets, then build toward singles. If you can talk in phrases but not full sentences, you’re in a solid working zone that most adults can sustain a while. The CDC’s talk-test and 0–10 effort scale are simple yardsticks for day-to-day play: see the CDC intensity guide for a refresher.

Where This Data Comes From

Energy estimates here lean on standard MET entries used in research. The Compendium lists tennis, singles at 8.0 MET and tennis, doubles at 6.0 MET, and many adults’ smartwatch readings land close to those figures once idling is trimmed. Harvard’s public table lines up with the same pattern across weights, which is why your match day often feels like a solid cardio block with added agility work.

Bottom Line For Match Days

Most adults burn 500–750 calories per hour in singles and 400–600 per hour in doubles. Scale that by weight and minutes on court, and you’ve got a number you can use for planning meals and recovery.

Want a broader nutrition plan around your racket time? Try our calorie deficit guide for a clean, step-by-step approach.