How Many Calories Does Walking a Mile Burn?
Walking a mile burns between 65 and 120 calories for most adults, with body weight being the biggest variable. A 120-pound person burns roughly 65–70 calories per mile; a 200-pound person burns around 105–115. Speed matters less per mile than most people expect — walking faster increases your intensity, but you cover the same distance in less time. The net result per mile is only a modest improvement as you pick up pace.
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The table below uses MET (Metabolic Equivalent of Task) values from the Compendium of Physical Activities and applies the standard formula: Calories = MET × weight (kg) × time (hours). These figures assume a brisk 3.5 mph walking pace on flat ground, which gives a MET of 4.3.
| Body weight | Calories burned per mile (3.5 mph) |
|---|---|
| 120 lb (54 kg) | 67 cal |
| 140 lb (64 kg) | 78 cal |
| 155 lb (70 kg) | 86 cal |
| 175 lb (79 kg) | 97 cal |
| 185 lb (84 kg) | 103 cal |
| 200 lb (91 kg) | 111 cal |
| 220 lb (100 kg) | 122 cal |
The pattern is straightforward: every additional pound of body weight adds roughly 0.5 calories per mile. Heavier bodies require more energy to move the same distance.
How Walking Speed Changes Calories Burned Per Mile
This is where most people are surprised. Walking faster does increase calorie burn per mile — but not by as much as you’d expect. The reason: higher speed raises the MET value (intensity), but you complete the mile in less time. The two effects partially cancel out.
For a 155-pound (70 kg) person:
| Speed | Time per mile | MET | Calories per mile |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3.0 mph (easy) | 20 min | 3.5 | 82 cal |
| 3.5 mph (brisk) | 17 min | 4.3 | 86 cal |
| 4.0 mph (fast) | 15 min | 5.0 | 88 cal |
| 4.5 mph (very fast) | 13 min | 6.3 | 98 cal |
The difference between a slow 3.0 mph walk and a brisk 3.5 mph walk is only about 4 calories per mile — negligible. The meaningful advantage of walking faster is that you cover more miles in the same time window, which is where the total calorie difference adds up.
Related Reading
How Many Calories Do You Burn Walking for 30 Minutes? →How to Calculate Calories Burned Walking Any Distance
The formula exercise scientists use is:
Calories = MET × weight in kg × hours walked
To convert pounds to kilograms, divide by 2.205.
Common MET values for walking on flat ground (from the Compendium of Physical Activities):
- 2.5 mph (slow stroll) = 2.8 METs
- 3.0 mph (easy pace) = 3.5 METs
- 3.5 mph (brisk walk) = 4.3 METs
- 4.0 mph (fast walk) = 5.0 METs
- 4.5 mph (power walking) = 6.3 METs
Example: A 160-pound (72.6 kg) person walking at 3.5 mph covers 1 mile in 17.1 minutes (0.285 hours).
Calories = 4.3 × 72.6 × 0.285 = 89 calories
Steps Per Mile and Calorie Implications
One mile equals approximately 2,000 to 2,400 steps depending on your height and stride length. Taller people take fewer, longer steps per mile; shorter people take more shorter steps. This means step-based calorie estimates are less precise than distance or time-based ones, because the stride length assumption introduces variation.
For most adults at average height, a rough estimate of 0.04 calories per step applies — so 2,000 steps per mile × 0.04 = 80 calories, which aligns with the table above for a 155-pound person.
Related Reading
How Many Calories Do You Burn Walking 10,000 Steps? →What Increases Calories Burned Per Mile
Walking uphill or on an incline
Incline walking significantly increases the energy cost per mile. A 5% grade raises calorie burn by approximately 30–40%; a 10% grade raises it by 50–60%. For a 155-pound person burning 86 calories per mile on flat ground, a moderate 5% incline brings that to roughly 112–120 calories for the same mile. Treadmill incline walking has become popular precisely because of this — you can increase intensity without increasing speed or impact on your joints.
Carrying extra weight
A loaded backpack or weighted vest forces your body to work harder per step. Adding 10% of your body weight increases calorie burn by roughly 8–10% per mile. A 160-pound person adding a 16-pound pack (10%) would burn approximately 10 extra calories per mile.
Walking on uneven terrain
Sand, grass, gravel, and trails require more muscle activation to stabilize your foot placement than flat pavement. Research suggests soft or uneven terrain can increase energy expenditure by 5–20% compared to a paved surface at the same speed.
How Many Miles to Burn 500 Calories?
This is a common weight-loss planning question. The answer depends on your body weight:
| Body weight | Miles needed to burn 500 calories (flat, 3.5 mph) |
|---|---|
| 120 lb | ~7.5 miles |
| 155 lb | ~5.8 miles |
| 185 lb | ~4.9 miles |
| 220 lb | ~4.1 miles |
Walking 5+ miles in a single session is impractical as a daily habit for most people. The more sustainable approach: combine a moderate daily walk (2–3 miles) with a small dietary calorie reduction to create the same deficit with less effort.
Related Reading
How Many Calories Should I Burn a Day Exercising? →Get Your Personalised Walking Calorie Estimate
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