Cycling Calories Calculator
Calculate calories burned cycling based on your weight, speed, and duration.
Your Details
Calories Burned
kcal in 60 minutes
Per Hour
562 kcal
Fat Burned
50.0g
MET Value
8
Calorie Equivalents
Frequently Asked Questions
Cycling calorie burn depends on intensity (typically estimated from speed or power output) and body weight. For a 150 lb (68 kg) rider: casual cycling at 10-12 mph burns approximately 400-500 kcal/hour; moderate pace at 12-14 mph burns approximately 500-600 kcal/hour; vigorous cycling at 14-16 mph burns approximately 600-700 kcal/hour; racing pace at 16-19 mph burns approximately 700-850 kcal/hour. Power output (watts) gives more accurate estimates — every 100W produces approximately 360 kcal/hour at 100% mechanical efficiency, adjusted to approximately 450-500 kcal/hour accounting for metabolic inefficiency (~75%).
Cycling Calorie Calculator -- Complete USA Guide 2026
The Cycling Calories Calculator provides instant, evidence-based results using clinically validated formulas from leading health organizations. Every calculation runs locally in your browser — no data stored, no account needed, works on any device.
Understanding your cycling calories metrics is an important component of proactive health management. This tool gives you the same calculations used in clinical and research settings, with reference ranges and health context that help you understand what your result actually means — and what actionable next steps are appropriate.
Whether you are preparing for a healthcare appointment, tracking progress in a wellness program, or simply curious about this aspect of your health, this calculator provides a reliable, science-backed starting point.
Combine with our BMI Calculator, our TDEE Calculator, and our Calorie Calculator for a comprehensive health assessment.
🔬 How This Calculator Works
Cycling calorie burn is calculated from MET values: road cycling at 10-12 mph = MET 8.0; 12-14 mph = MET 10.0; 14-16 mph = MET 12.0; 16-19 mph = MET 14.0; >19 mph = MET 16.0. Mountain biking = MET 10.0-14.0 depending on terrain. Stationary cycling, moderate = MET 5.5; vigorous = MET 8.5; spinning class = MET 8.5-12.0.
For cyclists with power meters, a more accurate calculation uses: calories = (power output in watts × duration in seconds) / 4.18 × 0.24 (accounting for ~24% mechanical efficiency of human cycling). A 60-minute ride at 200W = (200 × 3600) / 4.18 × 0.24 = approximately 825 kcal.
✅ What You Can Calculate
Evidence-based clinical formulas
Uses peer-reviewed, validated formulas from major health organizations — the same calculations trusted by healthcare professionals in clinical and research settings.
Instant real-time results
Results update as you type — no button to click. Explore multiple scenarios in seconds to understand how changes affect your result.
Complete data privacy
All calculations run entirely in your browser. No personal health data is transmitted, stored, or shared anywhere — ever.
Health context included
Beyond a raw number, results include reference ranges, health category classification, and guidance from major health organizations on what your result means.
Works on all devices
Fully responsive design works perfectly on phone, tablet, and desktop. No app download required — just open in your browser.
Completely free
No signup, no subscription, no premium features. Every calculation and all health context is permanently free for every user.
🎯 Real Scenarios & Use Cases
Annual health monitoring
Calculate and record key health metrics annually to build a personal health history that reveals meaningful trends and supports proactive health decisions over time.
Doctor appointment preparation
Arrive at medical appointments with your own calculations already done, enabling more focused and productive conversations about your health with your healthcare provider.
Wellness program participation
Track progress in employer wellness programs or personal health initiatives with objective, calculated metrics that are meaningful and evidence-based.
Health education and research
Students, educators, and researchers in health and nutrition fields use these tools to apply classroom formulas to real-world calculations and develop genuine health literacy.
💡 Pro Tips for Accurate Results
Use power output if available — a power meter produces significantly more accurate calorie estimates than speed-based calculations because speed varies with grade, wind, and drafting while power directly measures mechanical work output.
Account for the 'afterburn' (EPOC) effect from intense cycling: a hard 60-minute ride can elevate metabolism by 5-15% for 2-6 hours post-exercise, adding 50-150 kcal to the total energy expenditure beyond the ride itself.
Cycling calorie burn increases substantially with hills — a 5% grade at the same speed increases power output and thus calorie burn by approximately 40-60%. Hilly routes produce meaningfully different calorie burns than flat routes at the same average speed.
🔢 Data Sources & Methodology
The mechanical efficiency of cycling (approximately 22-26%) is remarkably consistent across cyclists of different fitness levels — meaning the relationship between power output (watts) and calorie burn is reliable for energy expenditure calculation. Research by Jeukendrup and Wallis established power-to-energy relationships across cycling intensity levels, enabling the watt-based calorie calculation used by cycling computers and training platforms. The physiological basis is that ATP synthesis from glucose oxidation is approximately 38% efficient, and muscle mechanical efficiency converting ATP to mechanical work is approximately 65% — giving an overall gross mechanical efficiency of roughly 25%.
🏁 Bottom Line
Your cycling calories calculation gives you a meaningful, personalized number grounded in validated science — far more useful than generic population guidelines that may not apply to your specific situation, body, and health history.
Use this result as one component of your complete health picture. Combine it with regular monitoring of other key metrics, professional medical guidance when results fall outside normal ranges, and consistent healthy behaviors that address the factors most within your control.
Explore our BMI Calculator, our Body Fat Calculator, our Calorie Calculator, and our TDEE Calculator for a complete health assessment.
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