Client wants to know if an hour of Saturday morning football cancels out last night's pizza. You need an honest calorie estimate from a specific activity before the conversation turns unhelpful.
Calories = MET × Weight (kg) × Time (hrs)
MET (Metabolic Equivalent of Task) = energy cost relative to rest. Sitting = 1.0 · Walking = 3.5 · Running = 7–12+
1 What this calculator does
Estimates calories burned during any physical activity using MET (Metabolic Equivalent of Task) values. Enter weight, activity type and duration to get total calories burned and burn rate per minute. Uses the validated MET formula from the Compendium of Physical Activities.
2 Formula & professional reasoning
Calories burned = MET x Weight (kg) x Duration (hours)
Burn rate (kcal/min) = MET x Weight (kg) / 60
MET = metabolic equivalent -- multiples of resting metabolic rate
MET assigns a number to each activity representing how many times resting metabolic rate it requires. Walking at moderate pace is MET 3.5. Running at 10 km/hr is MET 10. The formula multiplies MET by body weight (kg) and duration in hours to give total kcal. This is accurate within +-15% for most people -- it slightly overestimates for unfit individuals and underestimates for highly trained athletes.
3 Worked examples
⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.
Calories: 4.3 x 80 x 0.5Calories: 3.5 x 82 x 1.0Cycling: 8.0 x 75 x 0.75 = 450 kcal | Running: 10.0 x 75 x 0.75 = 562 kcal4 Sanity check
5 Common errors
| Error | Cause | Consequence | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Using exercise burn to 'earn' food without tracking intake | Overestimating how many calories exercise burns | Calorie compensation -- eating back more than was burned, preventing fat loss | Exercise burn is often 50-70% of what fitness trackers report. Use TDEE (which already includes activity level) as the baseline and resist eating back exercise calories unless training for endurance performance. |
| Using a generic MET without specifying intensity | Selecting 'running' without noting pace | Estimate significantly wrong -- running MET ranges from 6 (jogging) to 16+ (fast sprinting) | Select the most specific activity option available that matches your actual effort and speed. |
| Not accounting for skill affecting calorie burn | Applying standard MET to activities where technique matters | Experienced swimmers burn fewer calories than beginners for the same distance due to efficiency | MET values represent average energy cost. Skilled athletes may burn 15-25% fewer calories than beginners at the same activity. |
| Using estimates for clinical nutrition planning without professional oversight | Over-relying on calculator estimates for medical weight management | Inaccurate calorie balance in a clinical context | For clients with medical conditions (diabetes, heart disease, eating disorders), always involve a dietitian or physician in calorie target setting. |
6 Reference & regulatory links
7 Professional workflow
Common tools used alongside this one: