Last updated: June 2026
A 30-minute brisk walk (3.5 mph) burns approximately 120–210 calories for most adults, depending primarily on body weight. A 120-pound person burns around 104 calories; a 220-pound person burns around 215. Speed has a meaningful impact: switching from a slow stroll to a brisk pace increases the 30-minute burn by 50–60%. Here are the exact numbers for your weight and pace, and what actually moves the needle.
Get Your Precise 30-Minute Calorie Burn
Enter your weight, speed, and duration for a calorie estimate based on your actual data — more accurate than a table average.
Calories Burned Walking 30 Minutes by Weight and Speed
The table below uses MET values from the Compendium of Physical Activities and applies the formula: Calories = MET × weight (kg) × 0.5 hours.
| Body weight | 2.5 mph (slow) |
3.0 mph (easy) |
3.5 mph (brisk) |
4.0 mph (fast) |
4.5 mph (very fast) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 120 lb (54 kg) | 76 cal | 95 cal | 116 cal | 135 cal | 170 cal |
| 140 lb (64 kg) | 90 cal | 112 cal | 138 cal | 160 cal | 202 cal |
| 155 lb (70 kg) | 98 cal | 123 cal | 151 cal | 175 cal | 221 cal |
| 175 lb (79 kg) | 111 cal | 139 cal | 170 cal | 198 cal | 249 cal |
| 185 lb (84 kg) | 118 cal | 147 cal | 181 cal | 210 cal | 265 cal |
| 200 lb (91 kg) | 127 cal | 159 cal | 196 cal | 228 cal | 287 cal |
| 220 lb (100 kg) | 140 cal | 175 cal | 215 cal | 250 cal | 315 cal |
MET values used: 2.5 mph = 2.8 METs; 3.0 mph = 3.5 METs; 3.5 mph = 4.3 METs; 4.0 mph = 5.0 METs; 4.5 mph = 6.3 METs. All assume flat terrain.
Related Reading
Is 30 Minutes of Walking Enough?
For general health: yes. The CDC recommends at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic activity per week — which is exactly five 30-minute brisk walks. Meeting this guideline is associated with reduced risk of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and premature mortality. Thirty minutes at a brisk pace (3.5 mph) qualifies as moderate-intensity activity for most adults, as it raises heart rate to 50–70% of maximum.
For weight loss: 30 minutes daily helps but works best when combined with dietary changes. At 150 calories burned per session (155 lb, 3.5 mph), five walks per week burns approximately 750 calories — equivalent to roughly 0.2 pounds of fat per week from walking alone. To lose 1 pound per week, you’d also need a 300-calorie daily dietary reduction on top of your walking. Thirty minutes is a solid starting point, not a ceiling.
What Significantly Increases the 30-Minute Calorie Burn
Increase your pace
Walking faster is the highest-leverage change you can make. Going from 3.0 mph to 3.5 mph increases the 30-minute calorie burn by approximately 23% for a 155-pound person (from 123 to 151 calories). Going from 3.5 to 4.0 mph adds another 16% (151 to 175 calories). You cover more distance and work at a higher intensity in the same 30-minute window.
Add incline
A 5% treadmill incline at any walking speed increases calorie burn by 30–40% compared to flat walking. At 10% incline, the increase is 50–60%. For a 155-pound person burning 151 calories on a flat 30-minute walk at 3.5 mph, a 5% incline brings that to approximately 196–210 calories — adding 45–60 calories for the same time and speed investment.
Walk after eating
A 15-minute post-meal walk doesn’t dramatically increase calorie burn compared to walking at another time of day — the difference is minimal. However, research published in Diabetes Care found that a 15-minute post-meal walk reduced blood sugar spikes by up to 30%, which moderates hunger and reduces subsequent calorie intake. If you can only fit one 30-minute walk per day, timing it after the largest meal of the day provides metabolic benefits beyond the calorie number alone.
Walk more days per week
Consistency compounds. A 30-minute walk 3 days per week burns roughly 450 calories. The same walk 7 days per week burns 1,050 calories — more than twice as much for no increase in daily effort. Building a daily walking habit is more impactful than making any single walk longer or harder.
How a 30-Minute Walk Fits into a Daily Calorie Budget
A 30-minute brisk walk contributes meaningfully to a daily calorie deficit, but it is not the whole picture. Consider a 155-pound person targeting a 500-calorie/day deficit for 1-pound-per-week weight loss:
| Source | Daily calorie deficit |
|---|---|
| 30-min brisk walk (3.5 mph) | −151 cal |
| Skip one processed snack | −150–200 cal |
| Reduce dinner portion slightly | −150–200 cal |
| Total daily deficit | ~450–550 cal |
This illustrates why the combination of walking and modest dietary adjustments is more practical than trying to walk off all 500 calories. The 30-minute walk handles roughly 30% of the daily deficit; two small dietary changes cover the rest. None of these changes are dramatic, but the compound effect over weeks and months is substantial.
Related Reading
Related Reading
Calculate Your Exact 30-Minute Walking Burn
The walking calorie calculator gives you a personalised estimate based on your weight and speed — more accurate than reading off a table.
