Treading water burns roughly 3–12 calories per minute depending on body weight and effort level.
Cal/Min (Easy)
Cal/Min (Steady)
Cal/Min (Hard)
Beginner Pace
- Head-above-water flutter kick
- 20–40 second bouts
- Plenty of rest
Lower effort
Steady Pool Set
- Eggbeater or scissor mix
- 2–5 minute intervals
- Comfortable breathing
Moderate effort
Athlete Mode
- Continuous eggbeater
- Hands up for load
- 5–10 minute rounds
High effort
Calories Burned While Treading Water By Weight
The easiest way to estimate energy use is the standard MET equation: calories per minute = MET × 3.5 × body weight (kg) ÷ 200. Moderate pool treading carries a MET of about 3.5, while a hard, fast effort clocks in at 9.8 METs per the Compendium of Physical Activities . The table below shows rounded calorie burn for common body weights.
| Body Weight | Moderate Effort (3.5 MET) | Vigorous Effort (9.8 MET) |
|---|---|---|
| 125 lb (56.7 kg) | ~104 kcal | ~292 kcal |
| 154 lb (70 kg) | ~129 kcal | ~360 kcal |
| 185 lb (83.9 kg) | ~154 kcal | ~432 kcal |
These numbers come from the MET math above, not a device guess. The MET definition and calculation method are standard in exercise labs and textbooks, and the 3.5 ml·kg⁻¹·min⁻¹ baseline reflects resting oxygen use. If you prefer a talk-based yardstick, the CDC talk test classifies steady treading as moderate if you can speak in short sentences, or vigorous if words come out in bursts .
Energy balance also depends on what you burn across a day. Snack choices and your daily calorie needs shape weight change as much as any single pool set. A short session helps, and stacking several across the week moves the needle.
Calorie Burn From Treading Water: By Time And Intensity
Short bouts add up. Ten minutes at an easy pace will be a small bump; ten minutes at a water-polo pace is a real hit. Here’s what the MET math yields for quick blocks.
- 10 minutes, 125 lb (56.7 kg): ~35 kcal (moderate), ~97 kcal (vigorous)
- 10 minutes, 154 lb (70 kg): ~43 kcal (moderate), ~120 kcal (vigorous)
- 10 minutes, 185 lb (83.9 kg): ~51 kcal (moderate), ~144 kcal (vigorous)
Push duration to 20 or 30 minutes and the totals scale linearly, as long as effort stays similar. If you drift from a strong eggbeater to a gentle scull, your calorie rate falls with it.
How To Get A More Accurate Number
Lock The Inputs
Pick an effort target first. Use a heart-rate zone or the talk test, then hold that feel for the whole set. Calorie estimates will be closer when intensity stays stable.
Weigh Once Per Week
Use the same scale and time of day. Small weight shifts change the calorie rate, because body mass sits in the equation.
Stick With One Method
Apps, wearables, and lap counters apply different models. Choose one and track trends. Consistency matters more than a perfect single estimate.
Technique Tweaks That Raise Burn
Use The Eggbeater Kick
That circular leg motion keeps you tall in the water and loads the hips. It’s the go-to for lifeguards and water-polo players. Expect a jump toward the higher MET value listed for fast treading in the Compendium .
Add Load With Arms
Bring both hands above the surface for 10–20 second bursts. The upper-body demand spikes, so keep intervals short and crisp.
Trim The Rest
Shorten breaks between bouts. Even a 1:1 work-to-rest pattern bumps total work across a session.
Safety, Pool Setup, And Smart Progression
Pick The Right Lane Or Corner
Stay near a wall or buoy line while you learn the eggbeater. Fewer collisions, less stress.
Build In Ramps
Start with 6–10 rounds of 20–40 seconds. Over weeks, extend the work segments, then raise the hands or hold a medicine ball above water for short pushes.
Use Simple Yardsticks
Track how many continuous minutes you can hold without form slipping. Or count total work minutes across a session. Both show progress without a fancy tracker.
How We Calculated These Numbers
Energy use from movement is commonly expressed with METs. One MET equals resting oxygen consumption of ~3.5 ml·kg⁻¹·min⁻¹. To convert activity METs to calories, use this: MET × 3.5 × kg ÷ 200 = kcal per minute. This is a standard presentation in exercise physiology problem sets and coursework (see example math using the same formula in an ACSM-style worksheet) . MET values for pool treading come from the water-activity section of the Compendium of Physical Activities, which lists 3.5 MET for moderate treading and 9.8 MET for fast, vigorous treading .
How Long Does It Take To Hit 100 Calories?
Use the same MET math to flip the question. Minutes = 100 ÷ calories per minute. The table below shows rounded results.
| Body Weight | Moderate Effort (3.5 MET) | Vigorous Effort (9.8 MET) |
|---|---|---|
| 125 lb (56.7 kg) | ~29 min | ~10 min |
| 154 lb (70 kg) | ~23 min | ~8 min |
| 185 lb (83.9 kg) | ~19 min | ~7 min |
Sample Pool Sets To Try
Comfortable Pace Builder
Ten rounds of 30 seconds treading with 30 seconds rest. Keep shoulders relaxed and chin steady above the surface.
Mixed-Gear Intervals
Six rounds of 90 seconds with a pull buoy or small ball held at chest height. Rest one minute. Smooth, repeatable effort wins here.
Power Finish
Three micro-sets of 60 seconds with both hands raised, 30 seconds rest, then 60 seconds at steady pace. Repeat twice.
Where Treading Fits In Your Week
Aim for a blend of low-impact cardio and strength. Pool treading is joint-friendly and scales well from easy to spicy. The CDC’s aerobic guidance encourages a mix of moderate and vigorous minutes across the week; the talk test is a handy check during sets .
When Your Numbers Look Off
Your Watch Seems Low
Some devices undercount in water, especially without chest-strap pairing. Use the MET table and your weight to cross-check.
Your Watch Seems High
Did you alternate hard and easy without marking intervals? Average intensity matters, not the peak burst that felt tough.
You Feel Gassed Early
Take longer rests, shorten work bouts, and reset breathing rhythm. Quality beats grinding.
Bottom Line And A Handy Nudge
Treading water can be a light calorie drip or a strong burn. Weight and effort set the rate, and steady practice lifts both endurance and comfort.
Want a broader primer on staying active? Try our benefits of exercise.