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cycling activity

Calories Burned Cycling (Leisure) for 15 minutes

Cycling at a leisurely pace for 15 minutes burns approximately 70 kcal for a 70 kg (154 lb) adult. The exact number scales with body weight — see the table below. Calculation uses MET 4 from the 2011 Ainsworth Compendium of Physical Activities.

Calories burned
70 kcal
Cycling (Leisure) · 15 minutes · 70 kg adult · MET 4

Calories burned by body weight

Body weight Calories burned Per minute
50 kg (110 lbs) 50 kcal 3.3 kcal/min
60 kg (132 lbs) 60 kcal 4.0 kcal/min
70 kg (154 lbs) 70 kcal 4.7 kcal/min
80 kg (176 lbs) 80 kcal 5.3 kcal/min
90 kg (198 lbs) 90 kcal 6.0 kcal/min
100 kg (220 lbs) 100 kcal 6.7 kcal/min

Pace context: Cycling (Leisure) is approximately under 10 mph.

What this means

MET (4) is the intensity multiplier — 4x your resting energy expenditure at this pace. For a 70 kg adult, that\'s about 4.7 kcal per minute, or 70 kcal across the full 15 minutes session. Heavier individuals burn more for the same activity duration because moving more mass requires more energy.

For weight management context: 70 kcal is equivalent to about 0.7 medium apples, 0.3 slices of cheese pizza, or 0.4 servings of cooked chicken breast. To lose 1 lb of fat requires approximately a 3,500 kcal deficit (though Kevin Hall\'s 2011 Lancet model shows this overpredicts long-term loss by 30-50%).

Don\'t double-count. If you used a TDEE calculator with an activity multiplier (sedentary, light, moderate, very active), your maintenance calories already include typical exercise. Adding back exercise calories on top will under-eat your real maintenance. If you tracked only BMR and add exercise separately, eat back 50-70% of the estimate to account for compensation behaviour (Hall et al., NIH).

Other durations of cycling (leisure)

Related activities

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Frequently asked questions

How many calories does cycling at a leisurely pace for 15 minutes burn?
Cycling at a leisurely pace for 15 minutes burns approximately 70 kcal for a 70 kg adult. The exact number depends on body weight — heavier individuals burn proportionally more. See the per-weight table above for your specific number. Calculation uses MET 4 from the Ainsworth 2011 Compendium of Physical Activities.
How accurate is this calorie estimate?
For steady-state moderate-intensity activities, MET-based estimates are within ±15% of indirect calorimetry for population averages. Individual error can be ±25% due to fitness level, efficiency, and body composition. The 2017 Stanford study (Shcherbina et al.) found wearable devices have similar error ranges (Apple Watch ~27%, Samsung Gear S2 ~93% mean absolute error). For tracking trends day-to-day, MET estimates are reliable; for absolute calorie counts, treat as ±20%.
Should I eat back the calories I burn?
Partly. Most adults overestimate exercise calories and over-eat back. Hall and colleagues at NIH have demonstrated that compensation behavior (eating more, moving less) typically erases 50-75% of exercise calorie burn over a week. If using a TDEE × activity multiplier (sedentary to very active), the multiplier already includes typical exercise — don't double-count by eating back tracker calories. If tracking BMR + adding exercise separately, eat back 50-70% of the estimate.
What's a MET?
A MET (Metabolic Equivalent of Task) is the energy cost of an activity relative to resting. 1 MET = 3.5 mL O2 per kg per minute = approximately 1 kcal per kg of body weight per hour. Cycling (Leisure) at MET 4 means it costs 4x more energy than sitting at rest. The Ainsworth 2011 Compendium catalogues MET values for 800+ activities and is the standard reference used by exercise scientists, clinicians, and fitness apps.
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