A 1 km walk typically burns 35–80 calories, with body weight and pace shaping the exact total.
Calorie Range
Typical Burn
Upper Range
Flat Path
- Steady pace on sidewalks
- Neutral shoes
- Arms relaxed
Baseline
Incline Mix
- Short hill sections
- Brisk arm swing
- Midfoot strike
More Effort
Weighted Walk
- Light vest or pack
- Even posture
- Shorter steps
Highest Burn
Calories Burned From A 1 Km Walk: Practical Formula
The simplest way to estimate energy use is with MET values (metabolic equivalents). A MET expresses how hard an activity is compared with resting. Calorie math uses this equation: kcal = MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200 × minutes. That’s a standard method taught by Texas A&M AgriLife and many exercise science texts (MET formula).
For walking, METs vary with pace. Typical values from the Compendium: 3.0 for ~4 km/h (easy), 3.5 for ~5 km/h (moderate), and 5.0 for ~6.4 km/h (very brisk) on level ground. Those references come from peer-reviewed listings used by coaches, clinicians, and researchers (see the Compendium link in the card).
Early Reference Table: 1 Km Estimates By Body Weight
This table shows rough 1 km totals for two common paces using the equation above. It assumes level ground and steady form.
| Body Weight | Easy Pace (4 km/h) | Brisk Pace (5 km/h) |
|---|---|---|
| 50 kg | ~39 kcal | ~37 kcal |
| 60 kg | ~47 kcal | ~44 kcal |
| 70 kg | ~55 kcal | ~51 kcal |
| 80 kg | ~63 kcal | ~59 kcal |
| 90 kg | ~71 kcal | ~66 kcal |
| 100 kg | ~79 kcal | ~74 kcal |
You’ll notice the per-kilometer total mostly tracks body weight. Pace shifts the number a little because slower speeds add time while faster speeds add intensity. Snacks, meals, and workouts fit better once you set your daily calorie needs.
Why Distance Rules The Math
Over flat ground, walking cost per kilometer stays fairly steady across everyday speeds. Research shows the energy cost per mile climbs when pace gets very fast, and drops at very slow shuffles, but the changes are smaller than the effect of body mass. That’s why two people walking side by side at the same speed can land on very different numbers.
Running is a different story. Many labs treat 1 kcal per kg per km as a decent yardstick for running on level ground, which is almost double a typical walking cost. If you switch from a fast walk to a jog, per-distance energy use rises.
Pick Your Pace: What 1 Km Looks Like In Time
Time to cover 1 km depends on speed. These are common street paces and their corresponding METs.
| Street Pace | Speed | Time For 1 Km |
|---|---|---|
| Easy Walk | 4.0 km/h | ~15.0 min |
| Moderate Walk | 5.0 km/h | ~12.0 min |
| Very Brisk Walk | 6.4 km/h | ~9.4 min |
How To Personalize Your 1 Km Estimate
1) Weigh-Based Quick Math
A handy back-of-the-envelope range is ~0.6–0.8 kcal per kg per km on flat sidewalks. That puts a 60 kg walker around 36–48 kcal per km and an 80 kg walker around 48–64 kcal per km. This aligns with the MET method and with field studies that compare per-mile totals across speeds.
2) MET Formula, Step By Step
Pick a pace, grab its MET, then plug in minutes for 1 km.
- Easy: MET ≈ 3.0, minutes = 15 → kcal = 3.0 × 3.5 × body kg ÷ 200 × 15
- Moderate: MET ≈ 3.5, minutes = 12 → kcal = 3.5 × 3.5 × body kg ÷ 200 × 12
- Very Brisk: MET ≈ 5.0, minutes ≈ 9.4 → kcal = 5.0 × 3.5 × body kg ÷ 200 × 9.4
Want the official tables that show calories per 30 minutes at common paces? See the CDC calorie tables. They use the same equation behind the scenes.
3) Terrain And Load
Hills, grass, sand, and backpacks raise energy cost. The Compendium assigns higher METs to uphill grades and loaded carries, so totals go up even if distance stays the same. Think of this as “distance plus difficulty.”
Real-World Factors That Nudge Your Number
Shoes And Surface
Firm paths mean less energy loss. Cushy trails feel nice but can add a few calories over the same distance due to softer footfalls and tiny course changes.
Arm Swing And Stride
Brisk arm swing helps rhythm and can support a slightly faster pace at the same perceived effort. Shorter steps with quick turnover often feel smoother on hills and reduce braking forces.
Weather And Heat
Hot, humid days raise effort. If sun loads your route, slow the pace a touch and bring water for anything longer than a few kilometers.
Post-Meal Walking
Walking after a meal trades speed for comfort. Calorie burn per kilometer will stay in the same ballpark; the main gains here are digestion and blood glucose control. For longer walks, plan a light snack with some fluids beforehand.
Worked Examples You Can Copy
Case A: 60 Kg, City Pace
Pace 5 km/h, MET 3.5, minutes 12 → 3.5 × 3.5 × 60 ÷ 200 × 12 = ~44 kcal for 1 km.
Case B: 80 Kg, Park Loop
Pace 4 km/h, MET 3.0, minutes 15 → 3.0 × 3.5 × 80 ÷ 200 × 15 = ~63 kcal for 1 km.
Case C: 90 Kg, Steep Block
Pace 4.0–4.5 km/h on a grade, MET can jump into the 5–6+ range. Ten to fifteen minutes for 1 km could land around 65–85 kcal, depending on slope.
Distance Goals And Weekly Totals
Small chunks stack nicely. A 3 km stroll after dinner across five evenings delivers 9–15 short bouts and ~150–300 calories for a 60–80 kg adult, plus time on your feet. If you like tracking, line up your distance goal with step counts from your watch, then sanity-check the burn using the MET method.
When you want a deeper dive into walking benefits beyond calories—heart health, mood, and daily movement—this primer on walking for health lays out easy wins you can apply this week.
Pace Cheat Sheet For Common Routes
Flat Neighborhood Loop
Count on ~10–12 minutes per km at a comfortable clip. Glance at form every few blocks: tall chest, soft knees, easy arms.
Mixed-Grade Greenway
Short rises add minutes without much distance change. If you’re chasing a calorie target, hills help without needing longer routes.
Errand Walks
Groceries in hand effectively turn the walk into light loaded carries. That bumps effort and the per-km burn. If you carry weight often, rotate sides or use a small backpack.
Where These Numbers Come From
The calorie math here follows widely used MET equations and the same reference tables used by health agencies. The CDC page shows calories per 30 minutes at set paces, which you can scale to distance. The Compendium lists detailed METs for different walking styles, speeds, and grades. Both are reliable reference points for planning day-to-day distances.
One More Handy Table: Paces And METs
Keep these in your notes to estimate on the fly or to convert your watch pace into a MET.
| Street Pace | Approx. MET | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Easy (4.0 km/h) | ~3.0 | Conversation feels easy; steady breath |
| Moderate (5.0 km/h) | ~3.5 | Comfortable push; light warmth |
| Very Brisk (6.4 km/h) | ~5.0 | Stride lengthens; swings feel snappy |
Safety And Smart Progression
Pick routes with even footing, start with shorter distances, and nudge pace only when your breath settles. If you’re managing a health condition, follow your clinician’s advice on volume and effort. Many people find that five to six short walks across the week are easier to keep than two long ones.
Wrap-Up
For most adults on level paths, a 1 km walk lands between 35 and 80 calories. Body weight drives the number, pace shifts it a little, and hills or loads raise it. Use the MET steps for fast estimates, or keep the weight-based range in your pocket. Want a steady plan with form tips and habit ideas? Give our walking for health tips a try.