How Many Calories Do You Burn In Surya Namaskar? | Smart Burn Guide

Calories burned during Surya Namaskar depend on pace, body weight, and rounds; a typical 60–70 kg person burns roughly 110–220 kcal in 30 minutes.

Here’s the plain-English way to size your burn. The yoga sequence strings 12 postures into repeatable rounds. Your calories hinge on three levers: how fast you move, how many rounds you complete, and your body weight. Use the tables and steps below to get a number that fits your practice today—then adjust as your pace changes.

Calories Burned From Sun Salutation: What Changes The Number

Researchers have timed one round at about 3 min 40 s in a coached setting and measured an average rate near 3.8 kcal per minute, totaling ~14 kcal for that single round. That was with trained adults moving at a measured cadence. Faster, flowing sessions raise oxygen use; gentler, alignment-led sets sit lower. The Compendium of Physical Activities places this sequence at an intensity of around 3.3 MET, while power-style flows land higher on the spectrum.

Quick Formula You Can Reuse

The standard way to estimate exercise energy is the MET equation: kcal per minute = MET × 3.5 × body-weight (kg) ÷ 200. Pick a MET that reflects your pace (see below), plug in your weight, then multiply by session minutes. That’s it.

Table 1 — 30-Minute Burn By Weight And Pace

This table shows estimated calories for two common paces using the MET method: an easy alignment-focused flow (≈3.5 MET) and a brisk vinyasa-style cadence (≈6.0 MET). If you move even faster, your number trends higher; shorter, mindful rounds trend lower.

Body Weight Easy 30 min (≈3.5 MET) Brisk 30 min (≈6.0 MET)
50 kg (110 lb) ~92 kcal ~158 kcal
60 kg (132 lb) ~110 kcal ~189 kcal
70 kg (154 lb) ~129 kcal ~220 kcal
80 kg (176 lb) ~147 kcal ~252 kcal
90 kg (198 lb) ~165 kcal ~284 kcal

Once you set your daily calorie needs, it’s easier to see how a 30-minute session fits the day’s energy budget without guesswork.

Where These Numbers Come From

Two lines of evidence anchor the estimates. First, laboratory work measured oxygen use and total energy for a full round, reporting ~13.9 kcal for that single pass with trained adults and an average rate near 3.8 kcal per minute. Second, the Compendium assigns intensity values (METs) for hundreds of activities; the entry for Sun Salutation sits at roughly the moderate end. Together, they frame a realistic range for slow, steady, and fast sessions.

How To Personalize Your Estimate

Step 1 — Pick A Pace

Easy: you breathe comfortably, hold shapes, and take transitions slowly. Use ~3.3–3.8 MET.

Steady: you link breath and movement with short pauses. Use ~5–6 MET.

Athletic: you shorten holds, keep heat up, and insert planks or hop-backs. Use ~7–7.5 MET.

Step 2 — Do The Math

Take your weight in kilograms, multiply by the MET you chose, multiply by 3.5, then divide by 200. That gives kcal per minute. Multiply by total minutes you practiced. Example for 70 kg at a steady 6.0 MET pace for 30 minutes: 6.0 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 × 30 ≈ 220 kcal.

Step 3 — Sense-Check With Rounds

Lab data clocked ~14 kcal for one coached round at ~3 min 40 s. If your rounds are quicker, the kcal per round dips but kcal per minute climbs. If you hold shapes longer, per-round energy rises with the extra time.

Technique, Tempo, And Breathing

Small tweaks shift output more than most people think. Clean chaturanga lines, a tall cobra or upward dog, and active legs in downward dog all add muscular demand. Even breath counts matter: a four-count in/out pattern tends to slow you down and nudge the set toward the moderate zone; a two-count through transitions keeps heart rate up.

Common Pace Presets

  • Alignment set: 8–10 rounds in 30 minutes, long holds in lunges, generous rest between rounds.
  • Flow set: 12–14 rounds in 30 minutes, even breathing, brief plank holds.
  • Athletic set: 16–20 rounds in 30 minutes, shorter holds, crisp transitions.

External Benchmarks You Can Trust

For a reference intensity, the 2011 Compendium listing assigns Sun Salutation ~3.3 MET. That’s a moderate baseline and lines up with easy alignment-first sessions. For direct measurements, a physiology study recorded per-round energy (~13.9 kcal) and average burn rate during a coached round; you can read the energy cost study for the full breakdown. The math you’re using here is the same method taught in exercise science: kcal/min = MET × 3.5 × kg ÷ 200.

Rounds, Time, And What One Round Really Burns

Per-round energy depends on both intensity and duration. Faster rounds carry a higher moment-to-moment demand, yet each round is shorter, so the kcal per round can be similar to an easy round—or even lower—while kcal per minute is higher. That’s why comparing 10 slow rounds to 18 quick rounds needs a common yardstick: total minutes.

Table 2 — Kcal Per Round For A 70 kg Practitioner

These are reasonable presets you can compare to your own timing. If your weight differs, scale using the MET formula above.

Pace Preset Estimated Kcal Per Round Typical Round Duration
Leisurely alignment (≈3.5 MET) ~21 kcal ~5:00 min
Steady flow (≈6.0 MET) ~22 kcal ~3:00 min
Athletic cadence (≈7.5 MET) ~14 kcal ~1:30 min

Practical Ways To Nudge Your Burn

Use Time Blocks

Set a 30-minute window and count rounds, rather than chasing a fixed round target. This keeps you honest about breaks and transitions and makes your numbers comparable week to week.

Dial In Form Before Speed

Controlled lowering in chaturanga, a stable plank, and full hip extension in crescent add muscular demand without rushing. Clean lines protect shoulders and wrists while still boosting effort.

Play With Micro-Holds

Insert two-second pauses in plank, low lunge, or chair. You raise time under tension without breaking rhythm.

Mind Your Breathing

Even nasal breathing helps you keep cadence steady. Short exhales through effort phases (step-back, push-up) can make challenging sections smoother.

How This Fits A Daily Energy Plan

A 30-minute steady set for a 70 kg person lands near ~220 kcal. Stack that with your day’s walking, chores, and meals, and you’ll see the bigger picture. Penciling in the session against your calorie deficit plan can keep progress steady without guesswork or crash tactics.

Common Questions, Answered Plainly

Is Hot Yoga The Same Burn As A Fast Flow?

Heat raises sweat, not necessarily energy use. Movement pace and muscular work drive the numbers. A quick, well-aligned sequence will usually beat a slow, sweaty one for calories.

Do Wearables Get This Right?

Most trackers estimate from heart rate plus movement. They’re useful for trends, but the MET equation and a stopwatch remain solid for planning and comparing sessions.

What If I Split Sets Through The Day?

Energy is additive. Two 15-minute blocks at the same pace tally close to one 30-minute block.

Safety And Sensible Progression

Warm up wrists and shoulders. If you feel pinching in the front of the shoulder during chaturanga, shorten the lowering phase and widen your base. If your low back feels cranky in upward dog, drop to cobra and press long through the crown.

Template You Can Save For Fast Math

Pick A MET

  • Easy work: ~3.3–3.8
  • Steady flow: ~5–6
  • Athletic push: ~7–7.5

Run The Equation

kcal/min = MET × 3.5 × kg ÷ 200; then multiply by minutes practiced.

Reality-Check Against Rounds

One coached round has been measured near ~14 kcal at a relaxed cadence. Your per-round number shifts with speed, but your per-minute burn rises as you shorten the round.

Want a deeper dive into movement-based fat loss? Try our short read on the benefits of exercise for body composition and heart health.

Bottom Line For Planning

For most adults, 30 minutes of this sequence lands around 130–275 kcal depending on pace and weight. Use the MET method to tailor it, log the minutes, and let weekly totals guide your training and nutrition choices.