Last updated: June 2026
Swimming vs Running Calories: Which Burns More?
At moderate intensity, swimming and running burn almost identical calories per minute. Freestyle swimming at recreational pace and running at 5 mph (12 minutes per mile) both have a MET value of 8.3 — meaning a 155-pound person burns approximately 291 calories in 30 minutes doing either activity at that effort level. The difference emerges at the extremes: butterfly outburns most running speeds, and sprinting outburns moderate-pace swimming. For most recreational athletes doing 30–60 minute sessions, the calorie gap between the two is smaller than people expect.
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Swimming vs Running — Calorie Comparison Table (30 Minutes, 155 lb)
All values calculated using Calories = MET × weight (kg) × time (hours). Swimming MET values from the Compendium of Physical Activities; running MET values from the same source.
| Activity | MET | Cal — 130 lb | Cal — 155 lb | Cal — 185 lb | Cal — 220 lb |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Swimming — butterfly | 13.8 | 407 | 483 | 580 | 690 |
| Running — 7.5 mph (8 min/mile) | 12.0 | 354 | 420 | 504 | 600 |
| Running — 6 mph (10 min/mile) | 10.0 | 295 | 350 | 420 | 500 |
| Swimming — breaststroke vigorous | 10.3 | 304 | 361 | 433 | 515 |
| Swimming — freestyle moderate | 8.3 | 245 | 291 | 349 | 415 |
| Running — 5 mph (12 min/mile) | 8.3 | 245 | 291 | 349 | 415 |
| Swimming — breaststroke moderate | 5.3 | 156 | 186 | 223 | 265 |
The table makes the relationship clear: freestyle moderate and running 5 mph are calorie-equivalent per minute. To outburn running on a per-minute basis, you need butterfly or vigorous breaststroke/freestyle. To underburn running, you need moderate breaststroke or backstroke.
Is 1 km of Swimming Equal to Running?
This is one of the most commonly misunderstood comparisons in fitness. The answer depends on what “equal” means:
In calories: 1 km of swimming at recreational freestyle pace takes about 20–25 minutes for most adults. Running 1 km at 5 mph takes approximately 7.5 minutes. Both activities burn roughly the same calories per minute at similar effort (MET ~8.3). So swimming 1 km burns about 2.5–3× more calories than running 1 km — because swimming takes much longer to cover the same distance.
In time equivalence: The commonly cited rule — “1 mile of swimming equals 4 miles of running” — is accurate, but it refers to time and effort, not distance. Competitive recreational swimmers average roughly 1 mile per hour; recreational runners average 4+ miles per hour. Cover 1 mile in the pool and you will spend approximately the same time as a runner covering 4 miles at comparable effort. Calories burned in that equal-time workout are roughly the same for both activities.
The practical answer: if your running GPS shows 1 km, that is not the same as swimming 1 km. The swimmer covers far less distance in the same time but burns similar calories per unit time at the same relative intensity.
When Swimming Burns More Than Running
- Longer sessions. According to a 1993 analysis by Howard Wainer for the American Statistical Association, swimmers can sustain a vigorous pace longer than runners can. Over an equal-duration session, swimmers tend to burn approximately 25% more total calories because runners slow down progressively while swimmers maintain pace more consistently.
- Butterfly or vigorous breaststroke. Both have MET values above 10, exceeding moderate running (MET 8.3) and matching or surpassing running at 6 mph (MET 10.0).
- Low injury risk sessions. Swimming enables consecutive daily sessions without the joint recovery time running demands, meaning more total weekly calorie burn for athletes with joint limitations.
When Running Burns More Than Swimming
- High-speed running. Running at 7.5 mph (8 min/mile) or faster produces MET values of 12.0+, outpacing all swimming strokes except butterfly.
- Short, high-intensity sessions. Sprint interval running over 20–30 minutes at near-maximum effort burns more calories than swimming at recreational to moderate effort in the same time window.
- Weight-bearing load. Running requires the body to support its own weight against gravity with each step, adding to total calorie expenditure in ways that swimming does not. At equivalent perceived effort, a runner may burn marginally more than a swimmer.
Which Should You Choose for Weight Loss?
On calories alone, neither has a clear advantage for most people at moderate intensity. The decision should hinge on these practical factors:
| Factor | Swimming | Running |
|---|---|---|
| Joint impact | Near-zero | High — knees, hips, ankles |
| Muscle groups engaged | Full body | Predominantly lower body |
| Calorie burn per minute (moderate) | ~9.7 cal/min (155 lb) | ~9.7 cal/min (155 lb) |
| Accessible without equipment | Requires pool access | Yes |
| Sustainable with injuries | Yes — ideal for recovery | Difficult with joint issues |
| Post-exercise appetite increase | Higher (cool water) | Moderate |
If you have knee or hip pain, swimming is the clear choice — you can train as frequently as needed without the injury risk running carries. If you prefer outdoor workouts, have no pool access, or respond better to the simplicity of lacing up and going, running is equally effective on the calorie side. For the widest range of adults, swimming is a more sustainable long-term activity — particularly if current body weight makes running uncomfortable.
See How Your Swimming Session Compares
Use the calculator to get your exact swimming calorie burn and compare it against your running output on the same day.
