Calories burned running and walking

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Knowing how many calories you burn during exercise can be useful both for weight loss and overall health. If you're trying to lose weight, then burning more calories may help, and if you're on a calorie controlled diet, then understanding your calorie burn becomes critical for managing your calorie intake. Understanding how fast your burning calories also has an implication for overall health, as it's a useful measure of exercise intensity. If you're running, you burn the same number of calories per mile regardless of speed. That means the rate your burning calories is directly proportional to your pace. Walking is rather different, and the faster you walk, the more calories it takes to cover each mile. The calories burnt in both running and walking are also directly proportional to your body weight, so the heavier you are the more calories you burn. In addition, you obviously burn more calories it going uphill than on the level, and for modest slopes you burn less calories and going downhill. This page will allow you to estimate your calorie burn for different paces and slopes. By default, this page shows the values for a 150 pound person, but you can use the form below to customize it.

Body Weight (optional)

1 The Difference Between Running and Walking

Running and walking are two different forms of movement. In running you either have one foot on the ground or both feet in the air; both feet are never on the ground at the same time. In contrast, when walking you either have one or both feet on the ground and never have both feet in the air. Sometimes people think that basic physics means that it should take the same energy to move a human over a given distance regardless of running or walking. However, both running and walking are quite inefficient, so most of the energy expended does not go to forward movement. This is most easily seen when you compare a runner with a cyclist; for the same effort, the cyclist will move far faster. This means that the energy cost of running and walking is mostly around how much energy is wasted in each form of movement.

2 Do You Burn More Calories Running or Walking?

Generally, the answer is that running burns more calories per mile than walking, but as is so often the case, the real answer is "it depends".

  • If you're running at a moderate pace, you burn more calories per mile and per hour than walking at a moderate pace.
  • If you're race walking, then you can burn more calories per mile than running. (Race walking here is faster than about 14:00 min/mile.)
  • The relative Calories per hour for race walking and running will depend on the exact paces.

3 Should You Run or Walk in an Ultramarathon?

The table below gives some insight into when you should run and when you should walk in an ultra. This table shows how the slope would change your pace if you keep the same effort (Calories per hour). The first column is the running pace on the flat, then each column shows the pace you would travel if you run or walk on various slopes. The table is based on the available research, and there are obviously some practical limitations that make some values unreasonable for most people. As noted above, it's more efficient to walk than to run on level ground, up to the natural transition pace of about 14:00 min/mile. What's surprising is that it is also more efficient to run than walk on uphill sections, even as the equivalent pace drops. So, if you're able to run at a 10:00 min/mile on the flat, you could go up a 10% grade with the same effort at 16:35 min/mile when running or 17:39 min/mile when walking. This seems rather bizarre when both paces are below the natural transition pace (see below), but when I tested this out I found to my surprise it appears to be true. That doesn't mean you should run up the hills, as walking may be a useful break and using different muscles may help with fatigue. In addition, unless you've practiced race walking technique it's unlikely you'll be able to efficiently hit the faster downhill walking paces, where you may be able to hit the downhill running pace. For example, if you're running a 10:00 min/mile pace on the level, you may be able to handle running the 5:59 min/mile pace down a 10% decline, but few people will be able to walk at a 7:28 min/mile pace down the same slope. So it may not make much difference if you take walking breaks uphill or on the level, but you don't want to take them on the downhill sections. (In the table below, I've used a blue font where the walking pace is faster than the equivalent running pace.)

Equiv Pace on Slope
-10% -8% -6% -4% -2% 0% 2% 4% 6% 8% 10% 12% 14% 16% 18% 20%
Flat Running Pace Run Walk Run Walk Run Walk Run Walk Run Walk Run Walk Run Walk Run Walk Run Walk Run Walk Run Walk Run Walk Run Walk Run Walk Run Walk Run Walk
3:00 1:48 3:28 1:58 3:41 2:10 3:55 2:25 4:10 2:41 4:26 3:00 4:42 3:20 4:60 3:43 5:18 4:06 5:37 4:32 5:57 4:58 6:18 5:26 6:40 5:56 7:02 6:26 7:26 6:58 7:50 7:30 8:15
3:30 2:06 3:42 2:17 3:57 2:32 4:13 2:49 4:30 3:08 4:48 3:30 5:08 3:54 5:28 4:20 5:50 4:47 6:13 5:17 6:36 5:48 7:02 6:21 7:28 6:55 7:55 7:31 8:23 8:07 8:53 8:45 9:24
4:00 2:23 3:55 2:37 4:11 2:54 4:30 3:13 4:49 3:35 5:10 4:00 5:32 4:27 5:56 4:57 6:21 5:28 6:47 6:02 7:15 6:38 7:45 7:15 8:16 7:54 8:48 8:35 9:22 9:17 9:57 10:00 10:34
4:30 2:41 4:06 2:57 4:25 3:15 4:45 3:37 5:06 4:02 5:30 4:30 5:55 5:01 6:22 5:34 6:50 6:10 7:21 6:48 7:53 7:28 8:28 8:10 9:04 8:54 9:42 9:39 10:22 10:27 11:03 11:16 11:47
5:00 2:59 4:16 3:16 4:37 3:37 4:59 4:01 5:23 4:29 5:49 5:00 6:17 5:34 6:47 6:11 7:20 6:51 7:54 7:33 8:31 8:17 9:11 9:04 9:52 9:53 10:36 10:44 11:23 11:36 12:12 12:31 13:03
5:30 3:17 4:26 3:36 4:48 3:59 5:12 4:26 5:39 4:56 6:07 5:30 6:38 6:07 7:12 6:48 7:48 7:32 8:28 8:18 9:10 9:07 9:54 9:59 10:42 10:52 11:33 11:48 12:27 12:46 13:23 13:46 14:23
6:00 3:35 4:35 3:56 4:59 4:21 5:25 4:50 5:53 5:23 6:25 6:00 6:59 6:41 7:36 7:25 8:17 8:13 9:01 9:03 9:48 9:57 10:39 10:53 11:33 11:52 12:31 12:52 13:33 13:56 14:39 15:01 15:48
6:30 3:53 4:43 4:15 5:09 4:42 5:37 5:14 6:08 5:50 6:42 6:30 7:19 7:14 8:00 8:02 8:45 8:54 9:34 9:49 10:27 10:47 11:24 11:47 12:26 12:51 13:32 13:57 14:43 15:05 15:59 16:16 17:21
7:00 4:11 4:51 4:35 5:18 5:04 5:48 5:38 6:21 6:17 6:58 7:00 7:39 7:48 8:24 8:39 9:14 9:35 10:08 10:34 11:07 11:36 12:11 12:42 13:21 13:50 14:37 15:01 15:58 16:15 17:26 17:31 19:01
7:30 4:29 4:58 4:55 5:27 5:26 5:59 6:02 6:35 6:44 7:15 7:30 7:59 8:21 8:48 9:16 9:42 10:16 10:42 11:19 11:48 12:26 12:60 13:36 14:19 14:49 15:45 16:06 17:19 17:24 19:01 18:46 20:53
8:00 4:47 5:05 5:14 5:36 5:47 6:09 6:26 6:48 7:11 7:30 8:00 8:18 8:54 9:11 9:53 10:11 10:57 11:17 12:04 12:30 13:16 13:51 14:31 15:20 15:49 16:58 17:10 18:47 18:34 20:47 20:01 23:03
8:30 5:05 5:12 5:34 5:44 6:09 6:20 6:50 7:00 7:37 7:46 8:30 8:37 9:28 9:35 10:31 10:40 11:38 11:53 12:50 13:14 14:05 14:44 15:25 16:25 16:48 18:18 18:14 20:25 19:44 22:49 21:16 N/A
9:00 5:23 5:18 5:54 5:51 6:31 6:29 7:15 7:12 8:04 8:01 9:00 8:56 10:01 9:59 11:08 11:09 12:19 12:29 13:35 13:60 14:55 15:41 16:19 17:36 17:47 19:47 19:19 22:17 20:53 N/A 22:31 N/A
9:30 5:41 5:24 6:13 5:59 6:53 6:39 7:39 7:24 8:31 8:16 9:30 9:15 10:35 10:23 11:45 11:40 13:00 13:07 14:20 14:48 15:45 16:42 17:14 18:54 18:47 21:27 20:23 N/A 22:03 N/A 23:46 N/A
10:00 5:59 5:30 6:33 6:06 7:14 6:48 8:03 7:36 8:58 8:31 10:00 9:34 11:08 10:47 12:22 12:11 13:41 13:47 15:06 15:39 16:35 17:48 18:08 20:21 19:46 23:26 21:27 N/A 23:13 N/A N/A N/A
10:30 6:17 5:35 6:52 6:13 7:36 6:57 8:27 7:47 9:25 8:45 10:30 9:53 11:41 11:11 12:59 12:42 14:22 14:29 15:51 16:34 17:24 19:01 19:03 22:01 20:45 N/A 22:32 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
11:00 6:34 5:40 7:12 6:20 7:58 7:05 8:51 7:58 9:52 8:60 11:00 10:12 12:15 11:36 13:36 13:15 15:03 15:13 16:36 17:33 18:14 20:23 19:57 N/A 21:44 N/A 23:36 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
11:30 6:52 5:45 7:32 6:26 8:19 7:13 9:15 8:09 10:19 9:14 11:30 10:31 12:48 12:02 14:13 13:50 15:44 15:60 17:21 18:38 19:04 21:59 20:51 N/A 22:44 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
12:00 7:10 5:50 7:51 6:32 8:41 7:22 9:39 8:20 10:46 9:28 12:00 10:50 13:22 12:28 14:50 14:26 16:25 16:50 18:07 19:51 19:54 23:58 21:46 N/A 23:43 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
12:30 7:28 5:55 8:11 6:38 9:03 7:30 10:03 8:30 11:13 9:43 12:30 11:09 13:55 12:55 15:27 15:03 17:06 17:45 18:52 21:15 20:43 N/A 22:40 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
13:00 7:46 5:59 8:31 6:44 9:25 7:37 10:28 8:41 11:40 9:57 13:00 11:29 14:28 13:22 16:04 15:44 17:48 18:45 19:37 22:58 21:33 N/A 23:35 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
13:30 8:04 6:03 8:50 6:50 9:46 7:45 10:52 8:51 12:06 10:11 13:30 11:49 15:02 13:51 16:42 16:27 18:29 19:54 20:23 N/A 22:23 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A

4 The Effect of Incline

It's intuitively obvious that running or walking uphill is harder than level ground. It's also reasonably obvious that modest downhill slopes are easier than level ground, but as the slope increases so the difficulty becomes greater. Scientific research has supported and quantified this[1], showing that the energy cost of walking or running is to lowest at about 10% decline. There is some evidence that the slope of minimum energy is independent of pace[2]. This slope of minimum energy requirement seems to corresponds with the slope that neither requires pushing back for forward movement nor energy dissipation for braking[3]. The two graphs below show the relationship between slope and the cost of walking/running as measured by a number of studies.

The energy cost of running for various slopes.
The energy cost of walking for various slopes.

There are a number of factors that could change these assumptions:

  • A study looked at the energy cost of uphill, level, and downhill running before and after a 65Km mountainous ultramarathon[4]. After the race, the energy cost of uphill running was unchanged, but both level and downhill running were significantly harder by 8% (level) and 13% (downhill). These differences were greatest for the slowest runners and at least for the fastest runners.
  • A similar study of a rather more extreme 303 Km mountain ultramarathon found that the energy cost of uphill running and walking was lower after the race[5]. This result is a little surprising, and it's unclear why runners would do better fatigued than fresh. (The study did not look at level or downhill running.)
  • I've found no research on the effect of training on the energy cost of running uphill or downhill. I would expect that downhill training would reduce the energy cost of downhill running.

5 The Transition Between Running and Walking

The energy required to run a given distance is the roughly the same regardless of pace. This is different to walking, where the energy required to walk a given distance generally goes up with pace. This means that at slow speeds, it costs less energy to walk than run, but as you go faster it becomes easier to run. When people are put on a treadmill and the speed gradually increased, they will naturally transition from walking to running. This transition occurs at roughly the same speed for most people and is called the Preferred Transition Speed (PTS)[6]. You can see this in the two graphs below. The graph on the left shows the energy expenditure over time, showing the energy required to walk goes up faster than for running. The graph on the right shows the cost per distance, with running staying constant and the cost of walking rising with pace. (It takes more energy to walk a distance very slowly, so the graph shows the low point which is the lowest energy cost to cover a distance.)

Energy cost over time.
Energy cost over distance.

6 Calories Per Hour

This table shows the number of Calories used per hour for a person weighing 70 Kg.

Slope Running per hour (pace in min/Km) Walk per hour (pace in min/Km)
8:00 7:00 6:00 5:00 4:00 3:00 18:00 17:00 16:00 15:00 14:00 13:00 12:00 11:00 10:00 9:00 8:00 7:00
0.0% 450 514 600 720 900 1,200 177 184 195 204 219 240 265 295 336 400 480 600
0.5% 465 531 620 744 930 1,240 187 194 203 216 231 249 275 311 354 413 503 626
1.0% 480 549 640 768 960 1,280 197 205 214 228 240 263 290 322 372 433 518 643
1.5% 488 557 650 780 975 1,300 203 212 225 236 253 277 300 338 384 447 540 669
2.0% 503 574 670 804 1,005 1,340 213 222 233 248 266 286 315 349 402 467 555 686
2.5% 518 591 690 828 1,035 1,380 223 233 244 260 274 300 330 365 414 480 578 711
3.0% 533 609 710 852 1,065 1,420 233 240 255 268 287 309 340 382 432 500 593 729
3.5% 548 626 730 876 1,095 1,460 240 251 263 280 300 323 355 393 450 520 615 754
4.0% 555 634 740 888 1,110 1,480 250 261 274 292 309 337 370 409 462 533 638 771
4.5% 570 651 760 912 1,140 1,520 260 272 285 300 321 346 380 425 480 553 653 797
5.0% 585 669 780 936 1,170 1,560 267 279 293 312 334 360 395 436 492 567 675 823
5.5% 600 686 800 960 1,200 1,600 277 289 304 324 343 374 405 453 510 587 690 840
6.0% 615 703 820 984 1,230 1,640 287 300 315 332 356 383 420 464 522 607 713 866
6.5% 638 729 850 1,020 1,275 1,700 297 307 323 344 369 397 435 480 540 620 728 883
7.0% 653 746 870 1,044 1,305 1,740 303 318 334 356 377 411 445 496 558 640 750 909
7.5% 668 763 890 1,068 1,335 1,780 313 328 345 364 390 420 460 507 570 653 765 926
8.0% 683 780 910 1,092 1,365 1,820 323 335 353 376 403 434 475 524 588 673 788 951
8.5% 698 797 930 1,116 1,395 1,860 330 346 364 388 411 443 485 535 600 687 810 969
9.0% 713 814 950 1,140 1,425 1,900 340 356 375 396 424 457 500 551 618 707 825 994
9.5% 735 840 980 1,176 1,470 1,960 350 367 386 408 437 471 510 567 636 727 848 1,020
10.0% 750 857 1,000 1,200 1,500 2,000 360 374 394 420 446 480 525 578 648 740 863 1,037
10.5% 765 874 1,020 1,224 1,530 2,040 367 385 405 428 459 494 540 595 666 760 885 1,063
11.0% 780 891 1,040 1,248 1,560 2,080 377 395 416 440 471 508 550 605 678 773 900 1,080
11.5% 803 917 1,070 1,284 1,605 2,140 387 402 424 452 480 517 565 622 696 793 923 1,106

7 Calories Per Distance

This table shows the number of Calories used to cover a Kmfor a person weighing 70 Kg.

Slope Running Walk 18:00
min/Km
Walk 17:00
min/Km
Walk 16:00
min/Km
Walk 15:00
min/Km
Walk 14:00
min/Km
Walk 13:00
min/Km
Walk 12:00
min/Km
Walk 11:00
min/Km
Walk 10:00
min/Km
Walk 9:00
min/Km
Walk 8:00
min/Km
Walk 7:00
min/Km
0.0% 60 53 52 52 51 51 52 53 54 56 60 64 70
0.5% 62 56 55 54 54 54 54 55 57 59 62 67 73
1.0% 64 59 58 57 57 56 57 58 59 62 65 69 75
1.5% 65 61 60 60 59 59 60 60 62 64 67 72 78
2.0% 67 64 63 62 62 62 62 63 64 67 70 74 80
2.5% 69 67 66 65 65 64 65 66 67 69 72 77 83
3.0% 71 70 68 68 67 67 67 68 70 72 75 79 85
3.5% 73 72 71 70 70 70 70 71 72 75 78 82 88
4.0% 74 75 74 73 73 72 73 74 75 77 80 85 90
4.5% 76 78 77 76 75 75 75 76 78 80 83 87 93
5.0% 78 80 79 78 78 78 78 79 80 82 85 90 96
5.5% 80 83 82 81 81 80 81 81 83 85 88 92 98
6.0% 82 86 85 84 83 83 83 84 85 87 91 95 101
6.5% 85 89 87 86 86 86 86 87 88 90 93 97 103
7.0% 87 91 90 89 89 88 89 89 91 93 96 100 106
7.5% 89 94 93 92 91 91 91 92 93 95 98 102 108
8.0% 91 97 95 94 94 94 94 95 96 98 101 105 111
8.5% 93 99 98 97 97 96 96 97 98 100 103 108 113
9.0% 95 102 101 100 99 99 99 100 101 103 106 110 116
9.5% 98 105 104 103 102 102 102 102 104 106 109 113 119
10.0% 100 108 106 105 105 104 104 105 106 108 111 115 121
10.5% 102 110 109 108 107 107 107 108 109 111 114 118 124
11.0% 104 113 112 111 110 110 110 110 111 113 116 120 126
11.5% 107 116 114 113 113 112 112 113 114 116 119 123 129

8 Training Status Effects

The graph on the below shows that there are slight, non-significant differences between runners and active non-runners. This indicates that training does not change the transition speed, though it's worth noting that the actual transition speed is slower than would be expected from the energy costs[6]. Also note that the actual cost of running is not quite constant with speed, but actually goes down as you go faster.

The energy cost for runners and non-runners, showing the Preferred Transition Speed (PTS) and the Energetically Optimal Transition Speed (ETOS).

9 Formula

for those who like to create their own tables, below are the underlying formulas that I'm using. The cost of running (Cri) and walking (Cwi) on a slope is given by these equations:

Cri = 155.4i5 - 30.4i4 - 43.3i3 + 46.3i2 + 19.5i + 3.6
Cwi = 280.5i5 - 58.7i4- 76.8i3+ 51.9i22+ 19.6i + 2.5

Where i is the slope and the result I in Jules per Kg per Meter.

10 References

  1. AE. Minetti, C. Moia, GS. Roi, D. Susta, G. Ferretti, Energy cost of walking and running at extreme uphill and downhill slopes., J Appl Physiol, volume 93, issue 3, pages 1039-46, Sep 2002, doi 10.1152/japplphysiol.01177.2001, PMID 12183501
  2. Minetti, A. E., L. P. Ardigo, and F. Saibene. "Mechanical determinants of the minimum energy cost of gradient running in humans." Journal of Experimental Biology 195.1 (1994): 211-225.
  3. K. L. Snyder, R. Kram, J. S. Gottschall, The role of elastic energy storage and recovery in downhill and uphill running, Journal of Experimental Biology, volume 215, issue 13, 2012, pages 2283–2287, ISSN 0022-0949, doi 10.1242/jeb.066332
  4. Gianluca Vernillo, Aldo Savoldelli, Andrea Zignoli, Spyros Skafidas, Alessandro Fornasiero, Antonio La Torre, Lorenzo Bortolan, Barbara Pellegrini, Federico Schena, Energy cost and kinematics of level, uphill and downhill running: fatigue-induced changes after a mountain ultramarathon, Journal of Sports Sciences, volume 33, issue 19, 2015, pages 1998–2005, ISSN 0264-0414, doi 10.1080/02640414.2015.1022870
  5. Gianluca Vernillo, Aldo Savoldelli, Spyros Skafidas, Andrea Zignoli, Antonio La Torre, Barbara Pellegrini, Guido Giardini, Pietro Trabucchi, Grégoire P. Millet, Federico Schena, An Extreme Mountain Ultra-Marathon Decreases the Cost of Uphill Walking and Running, Frontiers in Physiology, volume 7, 2016, ISSN 1664-042X, doi 10.3389/fphys.2016.00530
  6. 6.0 6.1 A. Rotstein, O. Inbar, T. Berginsky, Y. Meckel, Preferred transition speed between walking and running: effects of training status., Med Sci Sports Exerc, volume 37, issue 11, pages 1864-70, Nov 2005, PMID 16286854