Calories Burned Calculator: Walking, Running, HIIT, Cycling & Bodyweight Workouts

🔥 Calories Burned Calculator

▾ MET reference values used in this calculator
ActivityMET ValueSource
Yoga3.0Compendium of Physical Activities
Walking (moderate)3.3Compendium of Physical Activities
Bodyweight workout6.0Compendium of Physical Activities
Cycling (moderate)7.0Compendium of Physical Activities
HIIT8.0Compendium of Physical Activities
Running (~6 mph)9.8Compendium of Physical Activities

Quick Answer: How Many Calories Does Exercise Burn?

The number of calories you burn depends on your body weight, the activity, your age, and your sex. Using MET (Metabolic Equivalent of Task) values, here are estimated calories burned in 30 minutes:

Activity MET 55 kg (121 lb) 70 kg (154 lb) 85 kg (187 lb) 100 kg (220 lb)
Yoga3.087 kcal110 kcal134 kcal158 kcal
Walking (moderate)3.395 kcal121 kcal147 kcal173 kcal
Bodyweight workout6.0173 kcal220 kcal267 kcal315 kcal
Cycling (moderate)7.0202 kcal257 kcal312 kcal368 kcal
HIIT8.0231 kcal294 kcal357 kcal420 kcal
Running (~6 mph)9.8283 kcal360 kcal437 kcal515 kcal

Formula: Calories = (MET × 3.5 × weight in kg × duration in minutes) ÷ 200. Adjusted for age and sex. Based on the Compendium of Physical Activities.

How This Calculator Works

This calculator uses Metabolic Equivalent of Task (MET) values — the gold standard method used in exercise science research — to estimate how many calories you burn during physical activity. MET values come from the Compendium of Physical Activities, a peer-reviewed database compiled by Ainsworth et al. and widely used in sports medicine, public health research, and fitness science.

The core formula is:

Calories = (MET × 3.5 × body weight in kg × duration in minutes) ÷ 200 Example: 70 kg person, 30 min run (MET 9.8) = (9.8 × 3.5 × 70 × 30) ÷ 200 = 360 kcal

Our calculator goes further than the basic formula by applying two additional adjustments based on your inputs:

  • Sex adjustment: Males have a higher proportion of muscle mass on average, which burns more energy. A small multiplier (~4%) accounts for this biological difference at the same body weight.
  • Age adjustment: Resting metabolic rate naturally declines with age — roughly 1–2% per decade after age 30. The calculator applies a modest reduction for users over 45 and over 60 to reflect this physiological reality.

The result is a personalized estimate accurate to within ±10–15% for most people — comparable to the accuracy of consumer fitness trackers, and more transparent in its methodology.

Calories Burned Walking

Walking is the world's most popular form of exercise, and one of the most underestimated calorie burners. A moderate walk (around 3.5 mph / 5.6 kph) has a MET value of 3.3. Most adults burn 95–175 calories per 30 minutes depending on body weight and pace. Upping your pace to a brisk 4 mph walk raises the MET to ~4.3, increasing calorie burn by roughly 30%. Adding incline (even a 5% grade) increases burn by another 30–40%.

Duration 55 kg (121 lb) 70 kg (154 lb) 85 kg (187 lb) 100 kg (220 lb)
20 minutes64 kcal81 kcal98 kcal115 kcal
30 minutes95 kcal121 kcal147 kcal173 kcal
45 minutes143 kcal182 kcal221 kcal260 kcal
60 minutes191 kcal242 kcal294 kcal346 kcal

Based on MET 3.3 (moderate walking). Heavier individuals and faster paces will produce higher results — use the calculator above for your exact estimate.

Calories Burned Running

Running at a moderate 6 mph (9.7 kph) carries a MET of 9.8 — almost three times higher than walking. A 70 kg person burns approximately 360 calories in 30 minutes at this pace. Running is the highest-calorie activity on this calculator per minute. It also generates a meaningful EPOC (Excess Post-exercise Oxygen Consumption) effect, meaning your body continues to burn slightly more calories for 1–2 hours after the run ends.

Duration 55 kg (121 lb) 70 kg (154 lb) 85 kg (187 lb) 100 kg (220 lb)
20 minutes189 kcal240 kcal291 kcal343 kcal
30 minutes283 kcal360 kcal437 kcal515 kcal
45 minutes425 kcal540 kcal656 kcal772 kcal
60 minutes566 kcal720 kcal874 kcal1029 kcal

Based on MET 9.8 (running ~6 mph / 9.7 kph). Slower jogs will produce lower numbers; sprinting produces significantly higher values.

Calories Burned Cycling

Moderate-effort cycling carries a MET of 7.0, placing it between bodyweight training and HIIT in calorie burn. A 70 kg cyclist burns roughly 257 calories in 30 minutes at a moderate effort. The main advantage of cycling over running is its low impact on joints — making it a strong option for those with knee or hip issues who still want high calorie burn. Stationary bikes and cycle trainers used in home gyms produce comparable results to outdoor cycling at the same effort level.

Duration 55 kg (121 lb) 70 kg (154 lb) 85 kg (187 lb) 100 kg (220 lb)
20 minutes135 kcal172 kcal208 kcal245 kcal
30 minutes202 kcal257 kcal312 kcal368 kcal
45 minutes303 kcal386 kcal469 kcal551 kcal
60 minutes404 kcal514 kcal624 kcal735 kcal

Based on MET 7.0 (moderate cycling). Higher-intensity cycling (racing, spinning classes at maximum effort) can reach MET 12+.

Calories Burned Doing HIIT

High-Intensity Interval Training (HIIT) has a MET of approximately 8.0 for a standard session, but the real calorie story doesn't end when you stop. HIIT generates a significant EPOC (Excess Post-exercise Oxygen Consumption) effect — also called the "afterburn" — where your body continues burning additional calories at an elevated rate for up to 24 hours after a vigorous HIIT session. Research suggests EPOC can add 6–15% more calories on top of the in-session burn, making HIIT one of the most time-efficient options for calorie expenditure.

A 70 kg person burns approximately 294 calories in 30 minutes of HIIT during the session itself. Including EPOC, the total 24-hour burn may be closer to 315–340 calories from the same session.

Duration 55 kg (121 lb) 70 kg (154 lb) 85 kg (187 lb) 100 kg (220 lb)
20 minutes154 kcal196 kcal238 kcal280 kcal
30 minutes231 kcal294 kcal357 kcal420 kcal
45 minutes347 kcal441 kcal536 kcal630 kcal
60 minutes462 kcal588 kcal714 kcal840 kcal

Based on MET 8.0. More intense Tabata or sprint-based HIIT can reach MET 10–14, producing noticeably higher in-session burns.

Calories Burned Doing Bodyweight Workouts

Bodyweight workouts — push-ups, squats, lunges, burpees, mountain climbers, and similar movements performed without equipment — carry a MET of approximately 6.0 for a standard session. A 70 kg person burns around 220 calories in 30 minutes of sustained bodyweight training. This is the most relevant activity for home gym users: no weights required, no machine needed, and the calorie burn sits comfortably above walking while being achievable anywhere.

The specific calorie burn depends heavily on exercise selection and rest periods. Continuous circuits with compound movements like burpees or thrusters push closer to HIIT intensity (MET 7–9), while standard push-up/squat circuits sit in the MET 5–6 range.

Duration 55 kg (121 lb) 70 kg (154 lb) 85 kg (187 lb) 100 kg (220 lb)
20 minutes115 kcal147 kcal178 kcal210 kcal
30 minutes173 kcal220 kcal267 kcal315 kcal
45 minutes260 kcal330 kcal401 kcal473 kcal
60 minutes346 kcal440 kcal534 kcal630 kcal

Based on MET 6.0. Calisthenics circuits with short rest periods can push toward MET 7–8+.

Looking for bodyweight workout ideas to maximize your calorie burn at home? Explore our fitness calculator hub for more tools to support your home gym training.

Calories Burned Doing Yoga

Standard yoga carries a MET of 3.0, making it the lowest-intensity activity in this calculator — but that doesn't make it unimportant. A 70 kg person burns approximately 110 calories in 30 minutes of yoga. More vigorous styles like Vinyasa, Power Yoga, or Hot Yoga can raise the MET to 5.0–6.5, significantly increasing calorie burn. Beyond the direct calorie burn, yoga improves flexibility, reduces cortisol (the stress hormone linked to fat storage), and supports recovery between more intense sessions.

Duration 55 kg (121 lb) 70 kg (154 lb) 85 kg (187 lb) 100 kg (220 lb)
20 minutes58 kcal74 kcal89 kcal105 kcal
30 minutes87 kcal110 kcal134 kcal158 kcal
45 minutes130 kcal165 kcal200 kcal236 kcal
60 minutes173 kcal220 kcal267 kcal315 kcal

Based on MET 3.0 (Hatha/standard yoga). Power yoga or hot yoga: use MET 5.5–6.5 and adjust accordingly.

How Many Calories Do You Need to Burn to Lose Weight?

One pound (approximately 0.45 kg) of body fat stores roughly 3,500 calories of energy. To lose that pound, you need to create a cumulative deficit of 3,500 calories through a combination of reduced intake and increased expenditure. In practice, most fitness professionals recommend aiming for a deficit of 300–500 calories per day — aggressive enough to produce noticeable results while sustainable enough to maintain long-term.

Exercise is one part of this equation. Here's what a realistic daily deficit looks like when combining diet and exercise:

Goal Weekly Fat Loss Daily Deficit Needed Example (Exercise + Diet)
Conservative~0.25 kg (0.5 lb)~250 kcal/day30 min walk (120 kcal) + 130 kcal diet reduction
Moderate~0.5 kg (1 lb)~500 kcal/day30 min HIIT (294 kcal) + 200 kcal diet reduction
Aggressive~0.75 kg (1.5 lb)~750 kcal/day45 min run (540 kcal) + 210 kcal diet reduction

The 3,500-calorie rule is a useful starting framework, but actual fat loss rates vary. Factors including hormonal responses, sleep quality, training adaptation, and individual metabolic variation mean real-world results often differ from these projections by 10–25% over several weeks. For a detailed picture of your daily energy balance, pair this tool with our TDEE Calculator and Weight Loss Timeline Calculator.

Methodology note: All MET values in this calculator are sourced from the Compendium of Physical Activities (Ainsworth et al., 2011 update), the peer-reviewed reference used by sports medicine practitioners and exercise scientists worldwide. The calorie formula — (MET × 3.5 × body weight in kg × duration in minutes) ÷ 200 — is the standard equation used in exercise physiology research. Age and sex adjustments are based on published BMR literature. Results should be treated as estimates, not clinical measurements.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many calories does walking burn in 30 minutes?

Most adults burn between 95 and 173 calories walking at a moderate pace for 30 minutes, depending on body weight. A 70 kg (154 lb) person burns approximately 121 calories. A 100 kg (220 lb) person burns approximately 173 calories. Walking faster (brisk pace at 4 mph) or on an incline increases calorie burn by 25–40%.

Is a calories burned calculator accurate?

MET-based calculators like this one are accurate to within ±10–15% for most adults — roughly the same accuracy as most consumer fitness trackers. The main sources of variation are individual fitness level (fitter people burn fewer calories at the same effort), exact body composition, terrain, and movement efficiency. Treat the result as a reliable estimate for planning purposes, not a clinical measurement.

What burns more calories: walking or running?

Running burns significantly more calories per minute — typically 2.5 to 3 times more than walking at a moderate pace. For the same 30-minute session, a 70 kg person burns about 121 calories walking versus 360 calories running. However, walking for a longer duration (60–90 minutes) can close the gap, and walking is more sustainable for everyday activity. For time-efficient calorie burn, running wins; for low-impact daily movement, walking is highly effective.

How many calories does HIIT burn in 30 minutes?

A 30-minute HIIT session burns approximately 231–420 calories depending on body weight (55–100 kg). A 70 kg person burns around 294 calories during the session. Crucially, HIIT also generates an afterburn effect (EPOC) that adds an estimated 6–15% more calories over the following 24 hours as your body recovers — bringing the total closer to 310–340 calories for a 70 kg person.

How many calories does a bodyweight workout burn?

A standard 30-minute bodyweight workout burns approximately 173–315 calories depending on body weight. A 70 kg person burns around 220 calories. The actual burn depends heavily on exercise selection — burpee-heavy or circuit-style workouts with minimal rest can push toward HIIT levels (MET 7–9), while lower-intensity calisthenics sit around MET 5–6. Bodyweight workouts are one of the best calorie-to-equipment-cost ratios of any exercise format.

How many calories does cycling burn in 30 minutes?

At a moderate effort, a 30-minute cycling session burns approximately 202–368 calories depending on body weight. A 70 kg person burns around 257 calories. Higher-intensity cycling or spin classes can double this figure. Stationary cycling in a home gym produces comparable calorie burn to outdoor cycling at the same perceived effort level.

How many calories does yoga burn in 30 minutes?

Standard yoga (Hatha, gentle flow) burns approximately 87–158 calories per 30 minutes depending on body weight. A 70 kg person burns around 110 calories. More vigorous styles like Vinyasa or Power Yoga can burn 150–250 calories per 30 minutes. Hot yoga adds a cardiovascular component through heat exposure, raising estimated burn to 200+ calories per session for most people.

What is MET and how is it used to calculate calories burned?

MET stands for Metabolic Equivalent of Task. It measures how much energy an activity requires relative to sitting at rest (defined as 1 MET). Walking has a MET of ~3.3 (uses 3.3× the energy of sitting still). Running has a MET of ~9.8. To convert MET into calories, exercise scientists use the formula: Calories = (MET × 3.5 × body weight in kg × duration in minutes) ÷ 200. MET values are sourced from the Compendium of Physical Activities, a peer-reviewed database used globally in sports medicine.

Does age affect how many calories you burn during exercise?

Yes. Resting metabolic rate declines by approximately 1–2% per decade after age 30 due to gradual muscle mass loss (sarcopenia) and hormonal changes. This means a 50-year-old burns roughly 3–6% fewer calories during the same workout as a 30-year-old of the same weight. This calculator accounts for this through a modest age-based adjustment.

Does biological sex affect calorie burn during exercise?

At the same body weight, males tend to burn slightly more calories than females — approximately 4–8% more — primarily because males generally have a higher proportion of muscle mass relative to fat mass, and muscle tissue is more metabolically active. This calculator applies a small sex-based adjustment to the base MET formula. Note that this difference narrows significantly at equal body composition (same body fat percentage).

How many calories do you need to burn to lose 1 pound of fat?

One pound (0.45 kg) of body fat contains approximately 3,500 calories of stored energy. To lose one pound per week, you need to create a calorie deficit of ~500 calories per day through a combination of exercise and dietary reduction. This can be achieved by adding a 30-minute HIIT session (~300 kcal) and reducing daily food intake by ~200 kcal. Real-world fat loss varies due to metabolic adaptation, water retention, and hormonal factors.

Why do fitness trackers show different calorie numbers than this calculator?

Most consumer fitness trackers are known to overestimate calorie burn by 15–40%, particularly for non-running activities. They rely on heart rate algorithms and movement sensors that can misinterpret activity type or intensity. MET-based calculators like this one are more conservative and more consistent with the scientific literature. A tracker reading of 500 calories for a workout often corresponds to 300–400 calories in MET-based estimates. Use this calculator as your reference for dietary planning.

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