How the Calories Burned Calculator Works, and How to Read the Number Honestly
By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026 · Calculators
Every calorie-burn estimate you see online traces back to one idea: the metabolic equivalent, or MET. Exercise scientists measured the oxygen people consume during hundreds of activities and expressed each one as a multiple of resting energy use. Sitting quietly is 1 MET. A gentle walk is around 2 to 3 METs, a brisk walk about 3.5, and running a fast mile climbs past 6. The calculator looks up the MET value for your chosen activity and feeds it into a single equation.
That equation is Calories = MET x weight (kg) x time (hours). It is deliberately simple, and that simplicity is its strength: the same inputs always give the same answer, which makes it ideal for comparing workouts. If a 75 kg person wants to know whether 40 minutes of cycling at 6 METs beats 60 minutes of moderate walking at 3.5 METs, the math settles it cleanly (300 kcal versus about 263 kcal) without any guesswork or proprietary algorithm getting in the way.
What trips people up is what the number includes. A MET-based result is gross expenditure, meaning it already contains the calories you would have burned just existing during that time. So a 30-minute workout that reads 200 kcal did not add 200 kcal of fat-burning on top of normal life. If you care about the genuine extra cost of exercising, subtract your resting burn for that span, which knocks a modest but real amount off the headline figure.
The honest limitation is individuality. MET tables describe an average person, often modeled on a healthy adult around 70 kg. They cannot see that you are fitter than average, walking uphill into a headwind, or carrying more muscle than the reference subject. That is why the same activity can vary by 10 to 20 percent between two real people. The fix is not to distrust the tool but to treat it as a calibrated ruler: consistent enough to track changes and rank activities, even if the absolute centimeters are approximate.
Used this way, the calculator becomes a planning instrument rather than a scoreboard. Estimate a typical week of activity, pair it with a sensible daily intake, and watch the real-world result over a few weeks. If your weight is not moving the way the math predicts, adjust the inputs you control such as duration and intensity rather than chasing decimal-point precision the method was never meant to deliver.
Quick tips
- Enter your weight in the units the field expects and double-check it, since weight is the single biggest driver of the result in the MET formula.
- Match the activity entry to your real intensity. Choosing 'brisk walk' over 'casual stroll' can change the estimate by 30 percent or more.
- For the extra calories an activity actually adds, subtract your resting burn (roughly 1 kcal per kg per hour) from the gross figure the tool shows.
- Recalculate when your weight changes meaningfully; an estimate based on old weight will drift, especially across a long weight-loss or training period.
The Calories Burned Calculator is free to use as often as you like — no signup required.