Health Calculator
Rucking Calorie Calculator
This calculator estimates calories burned during rucking using a comprehensive load-carriage model. It precisely accounts for the compounded metabolic effects of your body weight, pack weight, pace, terrain grade, and surface type to provide accurate energy expenditure metrics.
Rucking Calories
Estimate calorie burn using load, speed, grade, and terrain
Dry weight of the ruck (gear + water).
Uphill raises cost fast. Use 0 if unsure.
Results
Enter ruck details to estimate calories
What this rucking calculator measures
Rucking is loaded walking. The same pace that feels “easy” unweighted can become a high-output session once you add a pack, especially on hills. Instead of using a generic walking calorie estimate, this tool models the added metabolic cost of carrying a load.
The output includes total calories burned (kcal) and a calories-per-hour rate so you can compare sessions fairly even when distance varies.
Inputs that drive calorie burn
- Body weight and pack weight: the load-to-body ratio matters.
- Distance and time: together determine pace and speed.
- Grade: even small inclines noticeably increase cost.
- Terrain: softer or rougher footing increases energy cost at the same pace.
Method used (load-carriage metabolic model)
The calculator uses a field-tested load-carriage equation to estimate metabolic power (Watts) from your mass, the carried load, walking speed, grade (%), and a terrain factor (η). That metabolic rate is then converted to kcal/hour and total kcal for the session.
Total kcal ≈ (Watts × 3600 / 4184) × hours
This is intentionally practical: it’s designed for training estimates, nutrition planning, and comparing sessions — not as a lab-grade measurement.
Example scenarios
Use these to sanity-check inputs and see how terrain and grade change calorie burn.
Example 1 — 3 miles in 45 minutes with a 30 lb pack
Body: 180 lb • Pack: 30 lb • Distance: 3 mi • Time: 45 min • Grade: 0% • Terrain: pavement
Speed = 3 mi / 0.75 h = 4.0 mph
Model uses body mass + pack load + speed + terrain
Result: total calories and calories/hour
Example 2 — Same ruck, but on a steady 5% incline
Same as above, Grade: 5%
Uphill grade increases the metabolic term strongly
Even a few percent grade can add a large calorie cost
Result: higher kcal/hour and total kcal
Example 3 — Trail vs pavement
Body: 82 kg • Pack: 14 kg • Distance: 5 km • Time: 45 min • Grade: 0% • Terrain: trail
Terrain factor (η) increases cost vs firm surfaces
Trail/brush typically burns more per mile at the same pace
Result: moderate increase in kcal/hour
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is rucking and why does it burn so many calories?
- Rucking is walking (or hiking) while carrying a loaded pack. The load increases the energy required to move at a given pace, and uneven terrain or hills add even more. Compared to regular walking, rucking raises both muscular demand and total metabolic cost.
- How accurate is a rucking calorie calculator?
- It is an estimate. Calorie burn depends on your stride efficiency, fitness level, heat, wind, footing, pack fit, and how often you stop. That said, models that include load and speed are typically more informative than a generic MET number for “walking”.
- What is the best way to measure my pack weight?
- Weigh the fully loaded ruck — gear plus water — on a bathroom scale or luggage scale. Pack weight changes can be significant: an extra 1 liter of water adds about 1 kg (2.2 lb).
- Does downhill (negative grade) reduce calorie burn?
- Usually, yes — but not always as much as people expect. Downhill can reduce cardiovascular demand, but rough descents can still be taxing due to braking forces and stability work. If you’re unsure, leave grade at 0% and use terrain to capture difficulty.