Jogging 1.5 miles burns roughly 135–260 calories, based on pace and body weight.
Easier Pace
Mid Pace
Fast Pace
Flat Route
- Steady breathing
- Even splits
- Best for timing
Baseline
Hilly Course
- More leg drive
- Higher heart rate
- Extra energy cost
Challenging
Treadmill
- Set pace easily
- Use 1% incline
- Track time cleanly
Controlled
Calories Burned From A 1.5-Mile Jog: Real-World Ranges
Most runners land between ~135 and ~260 calories for this distance. A lighter runner moving fast finishes sooner, so total time drops. A heavier runner at a steady clip spends longer on course and moves more mass, so the number rises.
The quickest way to estimate your own total is to match pace with minutes, then use a science-backed multiplier called a MET (metabolic equivalent). MET values for running speeds are published in the Compendium of Physical Activities, and the CDC explains that 6.0 METs or more counts as vigorous intensity. You can skim both here: Compendium running table and CDC MET basics.
How We Estimated The Numbers
Calories burned can be estimated with a simple formula built from the MET method:
Calories ≈ MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200 × minutes
Here are common speeds with Compendium METs for context: 5.0–5.2 mph ≈ 8.5 MET; 6.0–6.3 mph ≈ 9.3–9.8 MET; 7.5 mph ≈ 11.8 MET. That gives you a clean way to swap your pace into the math without a special calculator.
Table 1: Estimated Calories For 1.5 Miles By Pace And Weight
This table uses MET 8.5 for ~12:00 min/mi (5.0–5.2 mph), MET 9.8 for ~10:00 min/mi (6 mph), and MET 11.8 for ~8:00 min/mi (7.5 mph). Time equals distance × pace, so 1.5 miles takes 18, 15, or 12 minutes at those speeds.
| Pace (Time For 1.5 Mi) | Body Weight | Estimated Calories |
|---|---|---|
| 12:00 min/mi (18 min) | 125 lb | ~148 |
| 12:00 min/mi (18 min) | 155 lb | ~184 |
| 12:00 min/mi (18 min) | 185 lb | ~219 |
| 12:00 min/mi (18 min) | 215 lb | ~255 |
| 10:00 min/mi (15 min) | 125 lb | ~146 |
| 10:00 min/mi (15 min) | 155 lb | ~181 |
| 10:00 min/mi (15 min) | 185 lb | ~216 |
| 10:00 min/mi (15 min) | 215 lb | ~251 |
| 08:00 min/mi (12 min) | 125 lb | ~137 |
| 08:00 min/mi (12 min) | 155 lb | ~170 |
| 08:00 min/mi (12 min) | 185 lb | ~203 |
| 08:00 min/mi (12 min) | 215 lb | ~236 |
These values line up with published 30-minute running charts from Harvard Health when scaled to the shorter time window, so the range checks out against a trusted reference.
Why Faster Isn’t Always More
Speed boosts the MET, but faster splits also cut total minutes. Push the pace and you burn more per minute, yet you finish sooner. That’s why the totals in the table sit close together across speeds for the same body weight.
Setup Steps To Get Your Personal Estimate
Step 1: Pick Your Pace
Use a recent run or tread readout. If you’re unsure, time a mile, then add half again for the 1.5-mile mark. A 10-minute mile points to a ~15-minute finish.
Step 2: Convert Weight To Kilograms
Multiply pounds by 0.4536. A 170-lb runner is ~77.1 kg.
Step 3: Plug Into The MET Formula
Choose the MET for your pace from the Compendium list, multiply by 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200, then by your minutes on course. That’s your estimate.
What Shifts Your Burn Up Or Down
Route Profile
Climbs raise the energy cost. The Compendium lists uphill entries with higher METs for the same speed. Even small rollers add a bump over a flat track.
Surface And Wind
Soft trails, grass, sand, and headwinds nudge effort up. A smooth treadmill feels lighter than a gusty out-and-back. Many runners set a 1% incline to mimic outside resistance.
Running Economy
Efficient stride, stable cadence, and good shoes reduce wasted motion. Two runners at the same pace can land different totals because of form and ground contact time.
Breaks And Pacing Style
Walk breaks drop average MET. Even pacing keeps it steady. Surges and recoveries change the minute-by-minute burn but the distance stays the same.
Where This Distance Shows Up
This length is common in time trials, school fitness checks, and military assessments. Good data helps you set splits and fuel. Snacks fit better once you set your daily calorie needs so training days and rest days both feel stable.
Method Notes And Sources
The MET approach is widely used in research and public health. It pegs one MET to resting oxygen use, then assigns activity values by speed or task. Running speeds in the Compendium give practical anchors for the 1.5-mile math, and the CDC page outlines how METs map to intensity bands. If you want a cross-check on time-based totals, Harvard Health’s 30-minute running tables are a handy reference and match these estimates when scaled.
Adjusting For Your Situation
Heavier Or Lighter Than The Table
Use the same steps. The formula scales by body mass, so the math adapts cleanly to any weight.
Slower Than 12:00 Or Faster Than 8:00
Pick the nearest MET from the Compendium chart. A 13:00 split maps to the 6.5–7.8 MET range; a 7:30 split maps near 12.0 MET.
Hills, Heat, Or Pack Loads
Hills and heat strain the system, and carrying a load raises cost. The Compendium lists backpacked running at higher METs than the same speed without a pack.
Pacing, Time, And Split Planning
The clock controls most of the math. Here’s a quick view of how long 1.5 miles takes at several common speeds. Use it to plan where you’ll be at each half mile.
Table 2: Time To Complete 1.5 Miles By Pace
| Pace | Estimated Time | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 13:00 min/mi | ~19:30 | Easy jog |
| 12:00 min/mi | ~18:00 | Steady effort |
| 11:00 min/mi | ~16:30 | Comfortable push |
| 10:00 min/mi | ~15:00 | Tempo feel |
| 09:00 min/mi | ~13:30 | Strong pace |
| 08:00 min/mi | ~12:00 | Hard but smooth |
Worked Examples You Can Copy
Example A: 155 Lb Runner At 10:00 Pace
Weight: 155 lb = 70.3 kg. Pace: 6 mph → MET 9.8. Time: 15 min. Calories ≈ 9.8 × 3.5 × 70.3 ÷ 200 × 15 ≈ ~181.
Example B: 185 Lb Runner At 12:00 Pace
Weight: 185 lb = 83.9 kg. Pace: 5.0–5.2 mph → MET 8.5. Time: 18 min. Calories ≈ 8.5 × 3.5 × 83.9 ÷ 200 × 18 ≈ ~219.
Example C: 125 Lb Runner At 08:00 Pace
Weight: 125 lb = 56.7 kg. Pace: 7.5 mph → MET 11.8. Time: 12 min. Calories ≈ 11.8 × 3.5 × 56.7 ÷ 200 × 12 ≈ ~137.
How To Nudge The Number (Safely)
Add A Gentle Incline
A 1–2% grade raises oxygen cost a bit without wrecking form. Outdoors, pick a route with mild rollers rather than sharp climbs.
Hold Even Splits
Staying smooth reduces wasted spikes and gives a cleaner estimate. It also helps you learn pacing, which pays off on test day.
Run Tall, Cadence Steady
Quick feet and relaxed arms help economy. Small tweaks add up over the full distance.
Fuel, Hydration, And Recovery
For a short run at this length, plain water usually covers it. If the day is hot, sip earlier. After the run, aim for a mix of protein and carbs. On training weeks, a modest energy buffer helps: steady meals, a snack when needed, and fiber-rich sides to keep you full.
Cross-Check With A Trusted Chart
Harvard Health publishes 30-minute calorie tables by speed and weight. Compare their numbers for your pace with your own time slice. The totals above line up when scaled to a 12–18 minute window, so you can feel confident your estimate isn’t drifting.
Bottom Line For Training Plans
Treat 1.5 miles as a brisk, repeatable benchmark. Use pace bands from the time table, then slot easy runs, strides, and one faster day each week. If you like gadgets, pair a chest strap or watch with your sessions, but you don’t need them to make progress. To build a broader base, see the benefits of exercise for ideas you can plug around your runs.