Running burns energy fast. How many calories you burn in 30, 60, or 90 minutes depends heavily on factors you can actually influence: your pace, duration, terrain or incline, and body weight.
Today, we prepared a guide showing how to estimate calorie burn precisely, with tables for common paces and body weights, plus examples you can plug your own numbers into.
Table of Contents
ToggleHow Calorie Burn Is Estimated for Running

Before jumping into the numbers, it helps to know how those calorie estimates are built. Here’s a quick look at the method behind them.
What’s a MET (Metabolic Equivalent of Task)
A MET is a multiple of your resting energy expenditure. One MET equals about what your body burns at rest. If running or some activity rates 10 METs, you are using roughly ten times more energy than at rest.
To estimate calories burned:
MET values are derived from systematic measurement, collected into sources like the Compendium of Physical Activities. Some example running speeds and their corresponding MET values:
Speed
Pace (min / mile)
MET
~5 mph
~12:00 / mile
8.3
~6 mph
~10:00 / mile
9.8
~7.5 mph
~8:00 / mile
11.5
~8.6 mph
~7:00 / mile
12.3
~10 mph
~6:00 / mile
14.5
Why Numbers Sometimes Differ Between Sources
Small differences appear in tables from universities, hospitals, and magazines because of:
For instance, Harvard Health has a 30-minute running table using speeds and body weights (125, 155, 185 lb). Its numbers are very close to what the MET formula produces. Slightly different input assumptions make small gaps perfectly normal.
Fast Estimates At a Glance
Below are MET-based calorie estimates for 30, 60, and 90-minute runs at common paces.
Body weights used: 125 lb (≈ 56.7 kg), 154 lb (≈ 69.9 kg), 185 lb (≈ 83.9 kg). Numbers are rounded to the nearest whole calorie.
30 Minutes of Running
Pace
MET
125 lb
154 lb
185 lb
5 mph (12:00/mile)
8.3
235
290
348
6 mph (10:00/mile)
9.8
278
343
411
7.5 mph (8:00/mile)
11.5
326
402
482
8.6 mph (7:00/mile)
12.3
349
430
516
10 mph (6:00/mile)
14.5
411
507
608
60 Minutes of Running
Pace
MET
125 lb
154 lb
185 lb
5 mph (12:00/mile)
8.3
471
580
696
6 mph (10:00/mile)
9.8
556
685
822
7.5 mph (8:00/mile)
11.5
652
804
965
8.6 mph (7:00/mile)
12.3
697
860
1032
10 mph (6:00/mile)
14.5
822
1014
1217
90 Minutes of Running
Pace
MET
125 lb
154 lb
185 lb
5 mph (12:00/mile)
8.3
706
870
1045
6 mph (10:00/mile)
9.8
833
1028
1233
7.5 mph (8:00/mile)
11.5
978
1206
1447
8.6 mph (7:00/mile)
12.3
1046
1290
1548
10 mph (6:00/mile)
14.5
1233
1520
1825
As a cross-check: Harvard Health’s 30-minute running data for 5 mph shows about 240, 288, 336 calories for people weighing 125, 155, 185 lb.
That lines up closely with the 235, 290, 348 figures above. Minor gaps show rounding or slight differences in weight conversion.
What Really Changes Your Calorie Burn

Running at the same clock time doesn’t always yield the same result. Some runners burn more, some less. Here are the variables:
Body Weight
Heavier runners expend more energy moving the same distance in the same time. The MET formula accounts for mass. Moving yourself takes work.
Pace and Grade
Faster speeds raise METs. Running uphill raises energy cost further because your body works harder against gravity.
Lab-based equations from bodies like ACSM link oxygen demand with speed plus grade. If you add incline, burn goes up.
Running Economy
Two people running at identical paces may burn differently because of how efficiently each one moves.
More economical runners use less oxygen at the same speed. Economy improves with training, experience, sometimes technique, band iomechanics. Less economical movement or inefficiencies drive calories up.
Terrain, Wind, Heat
Soft surfaces, trails, and sand slow you down for the same effort but cost more. Headwinds also raise resistance.
Heat and humidity make your body work to manage temperature, increasing energy demands. Some MET listings include adjustments for extra resistance (e.g., packs, pushing a stroller).
How to Calculate Your Calories In Under a Minute

Here’s a method you can apply yourself quickly:
For an easy online resource that helps you estimate calories burned in real time, click here.
Example A
Person weighs 70 kg, runs 30 minutes (0.5 hour) at 6 mph (≈ 10:00/mi). MET = 9.8.
Calories ≈ 9.8 × 70 × 0.5 = ≈ 343 kcal
Example B
Person weighs 84 kg, runs 60 minutes at 5 mph (≈ 12:00/mi). MET = 8.3.
Calories ≈ 8.3 × 84 × 1 = ≈ 697 kcal
If you prefer something quick: match your pace to a table (e.g., Harvard’s 30-minute table), slide to your body weight, and read off.
Common Paces and What They Feel Like
Getting a sense of what pace “feels like” helps pick the right MET value.
Pace
Approximate Feel
~5 mph (~12:00/mi)
Easy jog, conversation possible throughout
~6 mph (~10:00/mi)
Moderate effort, speech gets shorter
~7.5 mph (~8:00/mi)
Tempo style, harder to speak full sentences
~8.6 mph (~7:00/mi)
Strong effort, talking stutters
~10 mph (~6:00/mi)
Very hard for most non-elite; breath comes quickly
Using feel helps when GPS or treadmill readouts are fuzzy, or incline/wind shifts pace.
What 30, 60, 90 Minute Sessions Look Like In Real Life
Putting numbers into context: running schedules, likely calorie burns for somebody around 70 kg (≈ 154 lb).
If you run faster than 8.6 mph, or add hills, those numbers climb further.
Are Old “100 Calories Per Mile” Rules Accurate
Coaches often say, “You burn about 100 calories per mile” for average adults on level ground.
That’s a rough mental shortcut, not wildly off, but it hides how much variation happens because of weight, pace, and economy.
More precise estimates come from using METs. Those give estimates tailored for you rather than averages for some generic runner.
Afterburn, Intervals, Fuel, Hydration
Running sessions don’t end the moment you stop. The way you structure intervals, refuel, and hydrate can influence how your body continues to burn energy and recover afterward.
“Afterburn” and Intervals
Intense interval work, fast finish sprints, or hills boost calorie burn during the session. Small extra calories may continue after you stop (excess post-exercise oxygen consumption effect).
That “afterburn” is not huge for most runs. Most medical-hourly tables focus on energy use during activity itself, not extended afterburn.
Fuel and Hydration
If fat loss is a goal, yes, you can eat enough to support training while keeping daily calories sensible. Aging, sex, and basal metabolic rate all play roles.
Use basic daily energy guidance (for example, national health services often offer baseline numbers), then add training days on top.
Drink enough so dehydration doesn’t raise your heart rate unintentionally and make the energy cost climb.
Practical Tweaks That Shift Your Calorie Burn
@stellatoday These numbers r just in theory. Fat lose influenced by many things- food, basal metabolic rate, etc #burncalories #run #countcalories #edutokfit ♬ Backyard Boy – Claire Rosinkranz
Small changes produce a real difference over weeks.
Sample 4-Week Progression With Estimated Calories
Below is a beginner-friendly 4-week outline for someone ~70 kg. Runs mix different durations but avoid overtaxing. Calorie estimates use the same MET tables above.
Week
Session
Estimated Calories
Week 1
Mon: 30 min @ 5 mph
≈ 290 kcal
Wed: 30 min @ 5 mph
≈ 290 kcal
Sat: 40 min @ 5 mph
≈ 387 kcal
Week 2
Tue: 35 min @ 5-5.5 mph
≈ 320-345 kcal
Thu: 30 min @ 5.5 mph
≈ 315 kcal
Sun: 45 min @ 5 mph
≈ 435 kcal
Week 3
Tue: 40 min @ 5.5 mph
≈ 420 kcal
Thu: 30 min @ 6 mph
≈ 343 kcal
Sun: 50 min @ 5.5 mph
≈ 525 kcal
Week 4
Tue: 45 min @ 5.5 mph
≈ 473 kcal
Thu: 35 min @ 6 mph
≈ 400 kcal
Sun: 60 min @ 5 mph
≈ 580 kcal
Feel free to mix in walk breaks. Total weekly time on feet matters more than trying to do one giant session.
Calories per Minute Table
Sometimes easier to think “calories per minute” then multiply by running time. Using body weights of 125, 154, 185 lb and same MET values:
Pace
MET
125 lb
154 lb
185 lb
5 mph
8.3
~7.8
~9.7
~11.6
6 mph
9.8
~9.3
~11.4
~13.7
7.5 mph
11.5
~10.9
~13.4
~16.1
8.6 mph
12.3
~11.6
~14.3
~17.2
10 mph
14.5
~13.7
~16.9
~20.3
Calculation behind each cell: MET × (kg weight) ÷ 60.
How Weekly Running Fits With Calorie Goals

If weight loss or control is part of the goal, here is how running calories integrate:
- Pick a baseline daily calorie guidance.
- On training days, add run calories to that baseline.
- Allow rest or lighter days so recovery works well.
- Monitor weight/body composition over several weeks. Adjust daily intake or run volume accordingly.
Running more minutes per week tends to have a bigger impact than chasing a single long high-intensity session. Consistent volume adds up.
How to Reuse the Method
Here’s what works whenever you want a new estimate:
Adjust upward a little if your run includes hills, off-road parts, or heat. Note: always allow for some margin: your engine (body) has friction, inefficiency, breeze, slope.
Summary
Ever wonder how many calories you really burn on a run? Our Calories Burned Calculator can tell you: http://t.co/emH4Wucdle
— Runner’s World (@runnersworld) September 20, 2013
Running burns serious energy. Knowing roughly how many calories you burn in 30, 60, or 90 minutes gives you power: to plan training, food, and recovery in ways that don’t rely on guesses.
Use the MET-based method as your anchor: pace, weight, and duration are simple levers. Small tweaks raise or lower the numbers.
Most important is that you pick paces and durations that feel sustainable week after week. If you want, I can help you plug your own weight and pace into this method so you get personalized tables.
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