Yoga Calorie Calculator – Calories Burned Doing Yoga
How many calories does yoga burn? Vinyasa: ~260 kcal/hr. Hot Yoga: ~325 kcal/hr. Hatha: ~163 kcal/hr. Calculate your exact burn by weight, style & duration. Free.
Calories Burned by Yoga Type (60-Minute Session)
Calorie burn varies dramatically by yoga style. Here's a complete breakdown for a 65 kg (143 lb) person doing a 60-minute session:
| Yoga Type | MET | Calories (65 kg) | Calories (80 kg) | Intensity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yin / Restorative | 1.5 | ~98 | ~120 | Very Low |
| Hatha (gentle) | 2.5 | ~163 | ~200 | Low |
| Hatha (moderate) | 3.0 | ~195 | ~240 | Low–Moderate |
| Vinyasa Flow | 4.0 | ~260 | ~320 | Moderate |
| Ashtanga | 4.5 | ~293 | ~360 | Moderate–High |
| Power Yoga | 5.0 | ~325 | ~400 | High |
| Hot Yoga / Bikram | 5.0 | ~325 | ~400 | Moderate–High* |
*Hot yoga calories are elevated partly due to heat-related cardiovascular load, not just muscular effort. See section below for details.
For comparison: a 60-minute easy run at 8 km/h burns ~540 kcal for a 65 kg person. Yoga is not a high-calorie-burn exercise — its value is flexibility, strength, stress reduction, and injury prevention.
Use the calculator above to get your personal estimate based on your exact weight, yoga style, and session duration.
How Many Calories Does Yoga Burn?
Yoga calorie burn varies enormously by style — from gentle restorative yoga (roughly equivalent to light walking) to vigorous power yoga or hot yoga (comparable to moderate aerobic exercise). The primary determinant is the proportion of time spent in sustained muscular effort and elevated heart rate.
| Yoga Style | MET | kcal/hr (65 kg) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Restorative/Yin | 2.5 | 162 | Stretching, minimal effort |
| Hatha (gentle) | 2.5–3.0 | 162–195 | Basic postures, breathing focus |
| Vinyasa Flow | 3.0–4.0 | 195–260 | Moving sequences, moderate effort |
| Ashtanga | 4.0–5.0 | 260–325 | Set sequence, physically demanding |
| Power Yoga | 4.0–5.5 | 260–357 | High-intensity flow, strength-focused |
| Hot Yoga/Bikram (26 poses) | 3.5–5.0 | 227–325 | Heat-based; elevated HR from heat not exercise |
Yoga for Runners: Recovery and Performance Benefits
Yoga provides specific benefits for runners that complement aerobic training:
- Hip flexor flexibility: Running tightens hip flexors significantly. Tight hip flexors reduce stride length and predispose to lower back pain. Regular yoga hip openers (pigeon pose, low lunge, hip circles) maintain the range of motion needed for full stride mechanics.
- Core strength: Yoga builds deep stabilizing core muscles (multifidus, transverse abdominis) through sustained isometric holds. This deep core strength directly improves running posture and economy.
- IT band and piriformis flexibility: Two of the most common runner injury sites. Pigeon pose, figure-four stretch, and cow face pose directly target these structures.
- Ankle and foot mobility: Yoga's barefoot practice on varied surfaces builds intrinsic foot strength and ankle mobility — important for runners who spend all training in thick-soled shoes.
Hot Yoga: Heat, Calorie Burn, and Safety
Hot yoga (Bikram: 40°C/104°F, 40% humidity) is popular partly for the perceived increased calorie burn from sweating. However, research shows the calorie burn difference between hot and regular yoga is less than expected — the elevated heart rate during hot yoga comes primarily from thermoregulation (cooling the body), not muscle work. Heart rate elevation from heat is not the same as heart rate elevation from exercise in terms of fitness benefit.
Research from Colorado State University measured calorie burn in hot yoga at approximately 330–460 kcal per 90-minute session — similar to a brisk walk, not a run. Weight loss from hot yoga is primarily water loss (rehydrated by drinking), not fat. The real benefit: the heat itself improves tissue extensibility, allowing deeper stretches.
Yoga as Part of a Runner's Weekly Training Plan
Where yoga fits in a runner's training week:
- Day after a long run: 30–60 minutes of gentle/restorative yoga. Promotes blood flow and flexibility recovery without adding training stress.
- Off-day or easy day: Hatha or Vinyasa flow. Provides light cardiovascular activation and full-body mobility work.
- Morning routine (pre-run): 15–20 min dynamic yoga flow serves as warm-up, preparing joints and muscles for running. Avoid deep static stretches pre-run.
- Post-race recovery: Yoga for 2–3 days after a marathon allows active recovery with zero impact loading.
Key Yoga Poses for Runner Performance
The most beneficial yoga poses specifically for runners:
- Pigeon Pose: Deep hip opener targeting piriformis and external hip rotators. Hold 90 seconds per side for maximum effect.
- Low Lunge (Crescent Pose): Stretches hip flexors in full extension. Essential for runners with anterior pelvic tilt.
- Downward Dog: Simultaneous calf/hamstring stretch and upper body strengthener. Run-specific preparatory pose.
- Warrior I and II: Hip flexor stretch + quad/glute strengthening simultaneously. Running-functional strength position.
- Bridge Pose: Glute activation and strengthening. Directly relevant for hip extension power in running.
- Supine Twist: IT band and piriformis release. Best performed after runs while muscles are warm.
Yoga for Injury Prevention: Evidence Base
A 2016 randomized controlled trial published in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research found that runners who added yoga (2 sessions/week for 10 weeks) showed significant improvements in balance, flexibility, and running economy compared to a control group. Particularly notable: 40% reduction in self-reported lower extremity pain during and after running.
The injury prevention mechanism works through multiple pathways: improved flexibility reduces tissue strain at end ranges of motion; improved body awareness allows early detection of compensatory movement patterns before they cause injury; stress reduction lowers cortisol-mediated inflammation; and breathing techniques improve oxygen delivery efficiency during hard efforts.
Understanding MET Values: The Science Behind Yoga Calorie Calculations
The Metabolic Equivalent of Task (MET) is the standard unit for estimating energy expenditure during physical activities. One MET equals your resting metabolic rate — approximately 3.5 mL of oxygen consumed per kg of body weight per minute, or roughly 1 kcal per kg per hour. All calorie calculations for yoga (and exercise generally) are based on the Compendium of Physical Activities, a research database maintained by Arizona State University.
The calorie formula used by this calculator and most fitness devices: Calories = MET × weight (kg) × duration (hours)
Important caveats about MET-based calorie estimates for yoga:
- Individual variation (±15–20%): MET values are population averages. Your actual calorie burn depends on fitness level, muscle mass, movement efficiency, and even ambient temperature. A muscular 80 kg man in a power yoga class burns significantly more than a 55 kg woman in the same class — the MET system accounts for weight but not body composition.
- Instructor and class variation: A "Vinyasa" class at one studio may be a gentle flow (MET 3.0); at another, it may be an athletic power sequence (MET 5.0+). The MET value assigned to a yoga style is a broad average, not a precise measurement of any specific class.
- Heart rate ≠ work in hot yoga: Heart rate monitors overestimate calorie burn in heated environments because the elevated heart rate reflects thermoregulation, not increased muscular work. If using a heart rate–based calorie tracker in hot yoga, expect 20–40% overestimation.
- The afterburn effect is minimal: Unlike high-intensity interval training (HIIT), which produces significant excess post-exercise oxygen consumption (EPOC), yoga's EPOC is negligible — typically 5–10 additional calories after a session. Calorie estimates for yoga sessions represent nearly all the energy expended.
| Activity for Comparison | MET | kcal/hr (65 kg person) |
|---|---|---|
| Sitting quietly | 1.0 | 65 |
| Walking (moderate, 5 km/h) | 3.5 | 228 |
| Hatha Yoga | 2.5 | 163 |
| Vinyasa Yoga | 4.0 | 260 |
| Running (8 km/h) | 8.3 | 540 |
| Cycling (moderate) | 6.8 | 442 |
| Swimming (laps) | 7.0 | 455 |
Context matters: a 60-minute Vinyasa yoga session burns approximately 260 kcal — equivalent to a 25-minute easy run or a large banana with peanut butter. Yoga's value proposition is not calorie burning but flexibility, strength, balance, stress reduction, and injury prevention. Runners who do yoga for calorie burn are using the wrong tool; runners who do yoga for longevity and injury resilience are making an excellent investment.
Yoga Breathing Techniques (Pranayama) and Metabolic Effects
Pranayama — yogic breathing exercises — has measurable effects on metabolism, autonomic nervous system function, and stress hormones that extend beyond the physical posture practice:
- Ujjayi breathing (Ocean Breath): The signature breath of Vinyasa and Ashtanga practice. Constricting the throat creates an audible breath that slows the respiratory rate to 5–8 breaths per minute (vs. normal 12–20). Research shows this activates the parasympathetic nervous system, reducing cortisol by 15–25% and lowering heart rate variability — both markers of improved recovery capacity for athletes.
- Kapalabhati (Skull-Shining Breath): Rapid diaphragmatic contractions at 60–120 breaths per minute. This technique significantly engages the abdominal muscles and increases metabolic rate during practice. Studies show 10 minutes of Kapalabhati increases oxygen consumption by 12–18% above resting levels — a modest but real metabolic boost equivalent to light walking.
- Nadi Shodhana (Alternate Nostril Breathing): Controlled alternation between nostrils for 5–10 minutes has been shown to reduce resting heart rate, lower blood pressure, and improve autonomic balance. A 2019 study in the International Journal of Yoga found that 8 weeks of daily practice improved VO2max by 3–5% in previously untrained subjects — relevant for beginner runners starting yoga.
- Box Breathing (Sama Vritti): Equal-duration inhale, hold, exhale, hold cycles (typically 4–6 seconds each). Used by Navy SEALs and elite athletes for pre-competition anxiety management. The metabolic effect is calming rather than stimulating — ideal for race-morning anxiety or post-hard-workout recovery.
For runners, integrating pranayama into cool-down routines accelerates the shift from sympathetic (fight-or-flight) to parasympathetic (rest-and-digest) nervous system dominance. This accelerates recovery by promoting blood flow to damaged muscles, reducing post-exercise inflammation, and improving sleep quality — all of which contribute to better adaptation from training stress. Even 5 minutes of deep, controlled breathing after a hard run produces measurable reductions in post-exercise cortisol and perceived fatigue.
Tips for Getting Accurate Results
For the most accurate calculations, use precise inputs. Body weight should be measured at the same time each day (morning, after using the bathroom, before eating). Height should be measured standing straight against a wall. For calculations involving body fat percentage, use consistent measurement methods — if using bioelectrical impedance scales, measure at the same hydration level each time. If tracking changes over time, compare measurements taken under identical conditions.
Remember that all calculators provide estimates based on population averages and validated formulas. Individual variation is real — genetic factors, hormonal status, training history, and gut microbiome composition all affect how your body responds to diet and exercise. Use calculator outputs as starting points and adjust based on your real-world results over 4–8 weeks.
When to Consult a Healthcare Professional
These calculators are educational tools for general health and fitness guidance. They are not medical devices and do not replace professional medical advice. Consult a healthcare professional if: your results indicate values outside healthy ranges (BMI under 17 or over 35, body fat under 5% for men or 10% for women); you're experiencing symptoms that concern you; you're pregnant, have a chronic medical condition, or take medications that affect metabolism; or you're planning significant dietary or exercise changes alongside a medical condition.
For personalized nutrition advice, a registered dietitian (RD/RDN) can provide individualized guidance based on your complete health picture. For performance optimization, a sports medicine physician or certified strength and conditioning specialist (CSCS) can assess your fitness and create appropriate programming.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many calories does Vinyasa yoga burn?
Vinyasa yoga burns approximately 240–320 calories per hour depending on your weight and class intensity. For a 65 kg (143 lb) person, a 60-minute Vinyasa session burns around 260 calories (MET 4.0). A 90-minute Vinyasa class burns roughly 390 calories. The continuous flowing sequences in Vinyasa keep your heart rate elevated more than static yoga styles, making it the most calorie-efficient mainstream yoga style.
How many calories does Hot Yoga / Bikram burn?
Hot yoga (practiced at 35–40°C / 95–104°F) burns approximately 300–400 calories per 90-minute session for a 65 kg person. However, much of the caloric expenditure comes from thermoregulation (your body working to stay cool) rather than pure muscular effort. Colorado State University research found Bikram yoga burns roughly the same as brisk walking per hour. Weight lost during hot yoga is primarily water — not fat — and is regained upon rehydration.
How many calories does Hatha yoga burn?
Gentle Hatha yoga burns approximately 150–200 calories per hour for a 65 kg person (MET 2.5). A more active Hatha class can reach 190–240 calories per hour. Hatha is the lowest-intensity mainstream yoga style. While calorie burn is modest, Hatha is excellent for flexibility, posture improvement, and stress reduction.
Does yoga burn enough calories for weight loss?
Yoga alone burns modest calories — 150–350 kcal per hour depending on style. It can support weight loss as part of a calorie-deficit approach but is not a high-output calorie-burning exercise compared to running or cycling. Yoga's strength for weight management is stress reduction (high cortisol drives fat storage) and improved body awareness.
What type of yoga burns the most calories?
Power yoga and Ashtanga are the most calorie-intensive styles, burning 260–400 kcal/hour. Hot yoga burns similarly through a mix of exercise and thermal regulation. Yin and restorative yoga burn 150–200 kcal/hour — similar to gentle walking.
Should runners do yoga?
Yes — yoga is highly complementary to running. It addresses the specific flexibility deficits (hip flexors, hamstrings, IT band, calves) and muscle imbalances that running creates. Research supports yoga's benefits for running economy, balance, and lower extremity injury reduction. Two 30–60 min sessions per week is a common and effective recommendation.
Is yoga good for marathon training?
Excellent. Many elite marathon runners (including Eliud Kipchoge's training group) incorporate regular yoga and flexibility work. For recreational marathon runners, yoga reduces injury risk from the high training volumes of a marathon cycle, and the breathing/mindfulness practice improves race-day focus and pain tolerance in the final miles.
Does hot yoga burn more calories than regular yoga?
Not significantly more from the exercise itself. The heat elevates heart rate through thermoregulation, not increased muscle work. Colorado State research found hot yoga burns approximately the same as brisk walking, similar to regular yoga of the same intensity. The perceived greater effort is real, but much of it is cardiovascular compensation for heat, not muscle work.
How often should I recalculate?
Recalculate when your weight changes by 5+ kg, when your activity level changes significantly, or every 3–6 months to account for age-related metabolic changes. For athletes, recalculate training-related values (VDOT, training zones, VO2max estimates) after each significant race or every 6–8 weeks of structured training.
Are these calculations accurate for everyone?
All calculations use validated scientific formulas but are estimates based on population averages. Individual variation means any estimate could be off by 10–20% for a specific person. Use the results as starting points and adjust based on real-world outcomes over several weeks of monitoring.