Dumbbell curl work typically expends about 3–8 calories per minute, shifting with body weight, tempo, and load.
Light Pace
Brisk Pace
Hard Pace
Basic Set
- 10–12 reps
- 60 s rest
- 2–3 kcal per set
Low burn
Superset
- Curl + row
- 45 s rest
- 4–6 kcal per minute
Mid burn
Density Block
- AMRAP 10 min
- Minimal rest
- 7–9 kcal per minute
High burn
What Counts As Calorie Burn From Biceps Curls?
Energy cost comes from the work of flexing the elbow under load and the oxygen your body uses to fuel that work. The estimate most coaches use is based on MET values. MET is a handy ratio that compares your work rate to resting. One MET is sitting. Higher values mean harder work.
When you curl a dumbbell or use a cable, the whole set toggles between effort and brief pauses. That stop-and-go pattern lowers the average minute-by-minute burn compared with nonstop cardio. So the range matters more than a single number. A slow set with long rests sits near the low end; a brisk set with short rests sits near the high end. The method below lets you plug in your body mass and pace for a clear estimate.
Calories Per Minute And Per Set (With Realistic Ranges)
The Compendium lists resistance work near two bands: “light to moderate” and “vigorous.” In practice, curling with careful tempo and normal rests lines up near the lighter band; fast supersets push you toward the higher band. Use this math: kcal per minute = MET × 3.5 × body mass (kg) ÷ 200. That gives a per-minute rate you can multiply by time under tension for each set.
| Body Mass | Light-Moderate (≈3.5 MET) | Hard Pace (≈6.0 MET) |
|---|---|---|
| 55 kg (121 lb) | 3.4 kcal/min | 5.8 kcal/min |
| 70 kg (154 lb) | 4.3 kcal/min | 7.4 kcal/min |
| 85 kg (187 lb) | 5.2 kcal/min | 8.9 kcal/min |
| 100 kg (220 lb) | 6.1 kcal/min | 10.5 kcal/min |
Now translate minutes into sets. A sturdy 12-rep set might take 24 seconds at a 2–0–2 tempo. Two such sets inside a minute land near the mid-range values above. If your plan uses 60-second rests, the minute-by-minute average drops. That’s normal for isolation work. Your total session burn still accrues once you add all sets and the rest clock.
Calorie math gives you a tool, not a brag. If you’re new, start from the lower band and build skill. If you chase a pump, stay aware that heavy breathing and short rests raise the pace fast.
Once you have a grasp of daily calorie needs, it’s easier to see where curl work fits inside your day’s energy budget.
Close Variant: Calorie Burn From Biceps Curls By Rep, Set, And Session
Per Rep
A single curl is quick. Even with a decent weight, the energy for one rep is tiny, because the time is short. If a minute at your pace costs 4–6 kcal, a two-second rep costs about 0.13–0.20 kcal. Ten reps land near 1.3–2.0 kcal while the muscle is actually moving. The rest of the minute is recovery, which keeps the average in line with the table above.
Per Set
Use time under tension. Twelve reps at a steady 2–0–2 tempo use about 24 seconds of movement. Multiply your per-minute rate by 0.4. For a 70-kg lifter at a moderate pace, that’s 4.3 × 0.4 ≈ 1.7 kcal for the moving part. Real-world sets include a breath or two between reps and a hold at the top. With those pauses, the moving window stretches to ~30–40 seconds, so the set cost lands closer to 2–3 kcal. Add the rest clock and you get the minute-by-minute average again.
Per Session
Here’s a simple block: four sets of 12 with 60-second rests. That’s about eight minutes in the rack. At 4–6 kcal per minute, the block lands near 32–48 kcal. Superset curls with rows and the average rises because rests shrink and more muscle mass works at once.
What Drives The Number Up Or Down
Body Mass
The math scales with mass. Bigger bodies burn more per minute at the same MET. That shows in the table.
Tempo And Range
Slower lowering makes the set last longer. That boosts time under tension. It also spreads the work, so the feel goes up while the per-minute rate may stay similar. Partial reps shorten time. Full elbow extension and a smooth path keep effort honest without joint strain.
Load And Exercise Choice
Heavier dumbbells raise perceived effort and nudge you toward the higher band. Cable curls hold tension through the arc. Barbell curls let you move more weight but can bring in hips and shoulders if the load creeps too high. These change feel more than the raw math.
Rest Between Sets
Short rests keep heart rate elevated and push the average up. Longer rests let you lift heavier but lower the minute-by-minute burn. Pick rests that match your goal for the day.
Whole-Body Mix
Isolation work taps a small muscle group. Pairing curls with rows, presses, or carries recruits more tissue and raises the session’s total.
Science Behind The Estimates
The MET method stems from lab work linking oxygen use to energy cost. One MET equals resting oxygen use; higher values map to harder tasks. The CDC’s page on intensity bands explains where 3–5.9 and 6+ MET activities sit, so you can place effort on the scale and run the math (CDC intensity guide). The Adult Compendium catalogs the MET values used by researchers and lists resistance training in the ranges applied here (Compendium overview).
Researchers also measure energy during lifting with metabolic carts. Findings vary with exercise choice, rest length, and training age. Upper-arm work tends to land lower than full-body circuits, which supports the modest ranges shown for curls.
Build A Simple Curl Block You Can Track
Pick a weight you can move cleanly for 10–15 reps. Use a tempo you can repeat. Start with three to four sets. Rest 45–60 seconds. Write down load, reps, and rest. Repeat twice a week. Track how the work feels and adjust one variable at a time.
Sample Progression
- Week 1–2: 10–12 reps × 3, 60 s rest
- Week 3–4: 12–15 reps × 4, 45 s rest
- Week 5–6: Add a drop set on the last round
Superset with a back move to raise average burn without turning the session into cardio sludge. Banded face pulls or chest-supported rows are tidy pairings.
Common Mistakes That Waste Effort
Swinging The Hips
Momentum shifts work away from the elbow. Trim the load and stand tall.
Half Reps Every Set
Short ranges shave time under tension. Work through a full arc unless pain says no.
Rushing Rest
Shaving rests can help the burn, but sloppy reps stack strain. Keep rests honest, then squeeze tempo or weight instead.
Calorie Estimates For Three Common Curl Plans
| Plan | Time In Rack | Estimated Kcal |
|---|---|---|
| 3 × 12, 60 s rest | ~6–7 min | 25–40 kcal |
| 4 × 12, 45 s rest | ~8–9 min | 35–50 kcal |
| 5 × 15, 30 s rest | ~10–12 min | 45–65 kcal |
Where Curl Work Fits In Your Day
Most of your energy burn comes from your base needs and your day’s movement. Small muscle work adds a little, then pays off later by helping you hold lean mass. Pair curls with walking, rows, and a press. Eat protein at each meal. Sleep well. The numbers will make more sense once your week has rhythm.
Want a broader primer on intake targets? Try our daily calorie needs guide after this.
Sources And Method In Brief
Energy rates come from published MET tables and the standard kcal per minute equation. Resistance work commonly sits near 3.5 MET for a relaxed pace and about 6.0 for faster work. The CDC page explains how MET bands map to intensity, and the Adult Compendium houses the activity codes and MET values used across research.