How Many Calories Do You Burn In Trampoline? | Bounce Facts

Trampoline exercise typically burns ~140–210 calories in 30 minutes at a recreational pace for a 70-kg adult, with higher burn at vigorous effort.

Calories Burned On A Trampoline: METs, Minutes, And Weight

Motions on the mat translate into energy use. Researchers list a recreational jump session at 6.3 METs and a competitive-style session at 10.3 METs, which you can treat as “moderate-to-vigorous” effort. Those values come from the standard Compendium that exercise scientists use to estimate energy cost of common activities and sports; “trampoline, recreational” and “trampoline, competitive” are both included with their MET values.

Estimated Burn For 30 Minutes (By Body Weight)

Use this chart to get a realistic range. Calculations use the standard formula: calories per minute = MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200; totals below multiply by 30 minutes.

Body Weight Recreational (6.3 METs) Competitive (10.3 METs)
50 kg ~165 kcal ~270 kcal
60 kg ~198 kcal ~324 kcal
70 kg ~232 kcal ~379 kcal
80 kg ~265 kcal ~433 kcal
90 kg ~298 kcal ~487 kcal
100 kg ~331 kcal ~541 kcal

Real sessions feel different person to person. Air time, depth of bend through the knees and hips, and how often you sprint the bounce all nudge the numbers. Once your calorie deficit plan is set, a 20–40 minute jump block can slot in as cardio that’s easy on the joints.

What Drives Your Trampoline Calorie Burn

Intensity You Can Feel

Most people place a steady bounce in the moderate zone. You can test it with simple cues like the “talk test” from the CDC: during moderate effort you can talk but not sing; during vigorous effort you can say only a few words before pausing for breath. That makes a fast bounce set or sprint-style rounds clearly vigorous. See the CDC’s plain-English intensity guide for a quick refresher on these cues.

METs And Why They Matter

METs are a common yardstick in sports science. One MET is the energy used at rest; activities scale up from there. The jump entries in the modern Compendium list 6.3 METs for casual sessions and 10.3 METs for advanced work, so you can plug your own weight into the same math to personalize the chart above. Source: the Compendium’s sports table, which catalogs activities with codes and MET values.

Session Design And Movement Choices

Short sprints, quick tuck jumps, and high-knee runs on the mat ramp up calorie use. Gentle balance drills, arm reaches, and easy side steps pull it down. The more you keep the bounce continuous and the shorter your breaks, the higher the energy cost tends to climb.

Mini-Trampoline Workouts: What The Lab Found

A controlled study funded by ACE tracked college-aged adults through a choreographed mini-trampoline routine. During the working sets (excluding warm-up and cool-down), average energy use landed around 9–12 calories per minute depending on sex, with heart rate and oxygen use squarely in the training zone for building endurance. Those per-minute values add up to ~270–360 calories across a 30-minute block for many adults, aligning with the MET-based table above. Source: American Council on Exercise’s peer-reviewed report on mini-trampoline energy cost and training intensity.

How To Estimate Your Own Burn (Quick Math)

Step-By-Step Example

Pick a MET that matches your style: 6.3 for steady recreational bouncing; 10.3 for advanced, competition-style power. Convert your weight to kilograms, then use the formula:

Formula

Calories per minute = MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200

Then multiply by your minutes. A 70-kg adult at 6.3 METs: 6.3 × 3.5 × 70 ÷ 200 ≈ 7.7 kcal/min; over 30 minutes that’s ~232 kcal.

Pick The Right Effort

You don’t need perfect lab gear to peg the zone. Use breathing cues and leg fatigue as quick signals. If you can chat in short sentences while keeping a steady rhythm, you’re near the moderate range; if you’re gasping between words on sprint intervals, you’re in vigorous territory. Both count toward weekly cardio targets laid out in national recommendations for adults.

Technique, Safety, And Smart Progression

Form And Landing

Soften the knees, stack ribs over hips, and keep landings quiet. That reduces shear on ankles and knees while keeping you ready for the next push. Drive arms close to the body on high-knee runs to stay balanced.

Build Your Session

Start with 10–15 minutes of easy bounce and step-touches. Add two to four 60- to 90-second efforts where you increase height or speed. Over weeks, extend the work sets or trim rests. A timer and a simple movement rotation help you hold a steady rhythm with minimal fuss.

Who Should Modify

If you’re new to impact, coming back from a layoff, or you carry joint aches, favor low, quick bounces and keep the knees soft. Many people find a bar handle adds confidence until balance improves. Stop if you feel sharp pain or dizziness.

Sample Trampoline Blocks You Can Use

20-Minute Rhythm Mix

Warm 3 minutes. Then four rounds: 90 seconds steady jog on the mat, 30 seconds high knees, 30 seconds easy bounce. Finish with 3 minutes of side steps and reaches. Expect a moderate calorie range.

30-Minute Power Rounds

Warm 5 minutes. Then six cycles: 30 seconds tuck jumps, 60 seconds jog, 30 seconds jumping jacks, 60 seconds easy bounce. Keep landings soft. This pushes the burn up toward the higher range in the table for many adults.

Low-Impact Skill Session

Ten minutes of gentle balance work, alternating single-leg holds and easy side steps. Add 5 minutes of core pulses, then a 5-minute easy jog on the mat. This keeps you moving without big spikes in heart rate.

If you like threshold cues, the CDC’s talk test page explains how to judge moderate versus vigorous work with breath and speech; it’s a helpful sanity check during bounce intervals. MET definitions and the two trampoline entries live in the Compendium’s sports section, which researchers use when estimating energy cost for field activities.

Calories By Session Style (70-kg Adult)

Use these ballpark figures to plan sets. “ACE routine” reflects averages reported during the working portion of a choreographed mini-trampoline workout.

Session Style Per-Minute Estimate 10-Minute Total
Recreational Pace (6.3 METs) ~7.7 kcal/min ~77 kcal
ACE Routine (men/women avg.) ~11 / ~8.3 kcal/min ~110 / ~83 kcal
Competitive-Style (10.3 METs) ~12.6 kcal/min ~126 kcal

How Trampoline Cardio Fits Your Week

Cardio minutes add up across the week. Many adults aim for 150+ minutes of moderate work or 75+ minutes of vigorous work in line with federal recommendations. A few 20- to 30-minute bounce blocks can cover that with room to spare, especially if you make one or two sessions interval-based.

Comparing Bounce To Other Cardio (Feel And Numbers)

Perception Versus Output

One surprise from lab testing: people often rate a choreographed bounce routine as easier than its heart rate and oxygen numbers suggest. That “feels easier” effect makes it handy for days when running or vigorous cycling would pound the joints but you still want a solid calorie burn.

Where It Shines

Rebounding is compact, friendly to small spaces, and gentler on ankles and knees than hard-surface jogging. It teaches balance under motion and pairs well with short strength sets between rounds.

Where It’s Not Ideal

If you need extended steady-state efforts at fixed speeds—like preparing for a long outdoor run—you’ll still want time on the road or bike. Treat the mat as a complement that keeps impact low while you rack up energy burn.

Practical Tips To Raise Or Lower Your Burn

To Raise It

  • Add short sprints (20–40 seconds) and trim rest.
  • Push knee drive and arm swing on jog sets.
  • Use small dumbbells only if balance stays clean.

To Keep It Easy

  • Favor quick, shallow bounces and longer breaths.
  • Step on and off the mat between rounds.
  • Extend rests, and cut sprint blocks to 10–20 seconds.

Bottom Line You Can Trust

With a steady bounce, a 70-kg adult lands near ~230 calories in 30 minutes; with advanced effort, totals climb toward ~380 calories. That’s a useful range for low-impact cardio that still feels lively. Want a deeper walk-through of daily energy needs? Try our daily calorie target.

Methods: calorie estimates use the Compendium formula with trampoline METs (6.3 recreational, 10.3 competitive) and the ACE mini-trampoline study’s per-minute values for choreographed routines.