How Many Calories Do You Burn In The Hot Tub? | Real-World Math

Most soaks burn about 100–150 calories per hour in a hot tub, with water temperature and body weight nudging the total.

Calories Burned While Soaking In A Hot Tub: Realistic Ranges

A hot soak feels effortless, yet your body still works. Warm water raises skin and core temperature. Heart rate ticks up, circulation improves, and your system sheds heat. That work costs energy, but not as much as brisk movement.

Researchers often describe activity cost using METs (metabolic equivalents). One MET matches quiet sitting. A relaxed bath generally lands near 1.5 MET. A hotter soak with more of your body submerged can approach 2.0 MET for stretches. That’s the range used in the estimates below.

Quick Math: How The Estimates Are Built

Energy use scales with body mass and time. A standard formula converts METs to calories: calories per minute = MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200. Using 1.5–2.0 MET captures easy to warmer soaks without overpromising.

Hot Tub Calorie Estimates By Weight And Time

The table shows broad ranges for common body weights. The first number assumes a relaxed soak near 1.5 MET; the second reflects a warmer, deeper soak around 2.0 MET.

Body Weight 30 Minutes (1.5–2.0 MET) 60 Minutes (1.5–2.0 MET)
60 kg (132 lb) ~47–63 kcal ~94–126 kcal
70 kg (154 lb) ~55–74 kcal ~110–147 kcal
80 kg (176 lb) ~63–84 kcal ~126–168 kcal
90 kg (198 lb) ~71–94 kcal ~142–189 kcal
100 kg (220 lb) ~79–105 kcal ~158–210 kcal

These numbers line up with a small passive-heating experiment where an hour of very warm immersion landed near ~140 calories for an average-size adult. That’s within the 2.0 MET scenario here. Don’t treat that study like a training plan; it used a tiny group and a controlled setup.

Snacks, drinks, and meal timing matter, but only for feelings during a soak. For day-to-day weight control, set your daily calorie needs first, then let hot-tub time stay in the “bonus” bucket.

What Raises Or Lowers Calorie Cost In The Tub

Water Temperature And Depth

Hotter water drives a bigger heat-dump response. Shoulders under the surface also increases the area exposed. Both raise MET a notch. Stay under 104°F and use short blocks with cool-offs between rounds.

Time In The Water

Double the minutes and you roughly double the calories. Short sessions add up across the week with less strain than one marathon soak.

Body Size

Heavier bodies burn more at the same MET because more mass needs cooling. That’s why the ranges widen across the table.

Posture And Movement

Leaning back with shoulders out sits near the low end. Sitting upright, arms in, and a bit of gentle shoulder rolling nudges the middle. Keep movements light to avoid dizziness.

How Hot Tub Energy Use Compares To Light Exercise

A soak adds a modest bump over couch time. It can’t replace walking or cycling for cardiorespiratory gains. Think of it as recovery, relaxation, and a small calorie assist.

Activity (70 kg) Approx. MET 60 Min Calories
Hot soak, warm & deep ~2.0 ~147 kcal
Leisure walk, easy pace ~3.0 ~221 kcal
Brisk walk, ~3.5 mph ~4–4.5 ~295–332 kcal

Safety And Practical Tips For Calorie-Conscious Soakers

Mind The Temperature Cap

Keep the dial at or below 104°F. That upper limit exists to lower the risk of overheating and fainting. Many healthy adults feel great near 100–102°F, which still raises energy use without pushing limits.

Use Short, Repeated Rounds

Ten- to fifteen-minute blocks with cool water breaks work well. Step out if you feel light-headed, flushed, or queasy. That’s your cue to cool down.

Hydrate, Then Rehydrate

Warm water promotes sweating. Sip plain water before and after. Skip alcohol during soaks to prevent drowsiness and poor balance.

Place Hot-Tub Time In The Bigger Picture

Calories from a soak are modest. Pair the tub with daily movement and steady eating habits. That combo handles the bulk of weight-management progress. If you’re tracking, log tub minutes as light activity to keep your day’s numbers honest.

How To Estimate Your Own Burn

Use 1.5 MET for a relaxed soak and 2.0 MET for a warmer, deeper session. Multiply by your weight and time using the formula shown earlier. Keep it conservative. A soak isn’t the time to chase big numbers; it’s a chance to relax and still chip away at the day’s energy total.

Worked Example

Let’s say 80 kg for 30 minutes at ~2.0 MET. Calories per minute: 2.0 × 3.5 × 80 ÷ 200 ≈ 2.8. Over 30 minutes, that’s about 84 calories. The same person at ~1.5 MET lands near 63 calories.

Frequently Raised Questions, Answered Briefly

Does A Hot Tub Burn As Much As A Walk?

Not quite. Even an easy walk usually beats a soak for calorie burn. A soak still helps recovery and stress relief, which can make regular movement easier to stick with.

Can You Lose Weight With Only Hot-Tub Time?

Weight change depends mainly on your weekly intake vs. output. Tub time adds a small nudge to output. The big levers are eating habits, sleep, steps, and strength work.

What About Very Long Sessions?

Long stretches raise risk without huge calorie returns. Split sessions, cool off between rounds, and keep the thermostat sane.

Science Corner: Why Heat Costs Energy

Warm water delivers heat to the body. To hold steady core temperature, blood vessels widen and skin blood flow rises. Heart rate climbs to move that heat outward. Muscles aren’t doing much, yet the system still spends energy to dump heat. That’s the “passive heating” effect found in lab setups.

Where The Numbers Come From

The Compendium of Physical Activities lists sitting in a bath at ~1.5 MET, which is a helpful baseline. Health agencies define one MET as the rate used at rest and use METs to classify intensity. Pair those with a simple calories-per-minute formula and you have a practical estimate.

Why You See “~140 Calories Per Hour” In The News

A small trial using very warm immersion reported roughly that figure for an average-size adult. It aligns with the 2.0 MET math for 60 minutes. Treat it as an upper-mid reference, not a universal promise.

Hot Tub Use And Hygiene Basics

Clean, well-managed water matters just as much as temperature. Shower before you hop in. If a tub smells strongly of chemicals, looks cloudy, or feels slimy, skip it. Keep any cuts out of the water. Parents should set shorter blocks for kids and watch them closely.

Putting It All Together

A soak won’t match a brisk walk for calorie burn, yet it still moves the needle. Use it for recovery, stress relief, and a gentle bump in energy use. Keep sessions short, keep the water within the safe range, and treat the tub as a supporting act in a week built around movement and steady meals.

Want an easy primer to pair with your soak routine? Try our walking basics for steady day-to-day movement.