📖 Overview
Use this calculator to plan swim sessions with clear burn estimates.
🧪 Example Scenarios
Use these default and higher-pressure example inputs to explore how sensitive this calculator is before using your real numbers.
| Input | Base Case | Higher Pressure Case |
|---|---|---|
| Weight (kg) | 75 | 86.25 |
| Minutes Active | 40 | 48 |
⚙️ How It Works
This estimates calories burned from body weight and active minutes using a fixed intensity factor.
The Formula
Calories = Weight (kg) × Duration (min) × MET × 0.0175
| Weight | Body weight in kilograms |
| Duration | Active exercise time in minutes |
| MET | Metabolic Equivalent — intensity multiplier for the activity |
| 0.0175 | Unit conversion constant |
💡Calorie estimates can vary ±20% based on fitness level, technique, and individual metabolic rate. Use for directional planning, not precise nutrition tracking.
Quick Reference
| Activity | MET | 70 kg / 30 min | 80 kg / 30 min |
|---|---|---|---|
| Walking (moderate) | 3.5 | 128 kcal | 147 kcal |
| Cycling (leisure) | 6.0 | 220 kcal | 252 kcal |
| Running (8 km/h) | 8.0 | 294 kcal | 336 kcal |
| Swimming (laps) | 7.0 | 257 kcal | 294 kcal |
| HIIT | 10.0 | 367 kcal | 420 kcal |
When To Use This
- Use this tool when you need a fast decision during active planning or execution.
- Use this before committing money, time, or tradeoffs that are hard to reverse.
- Use this to compare options using the same assumptions across scenarios.
Edge Cases To Watch
- Results can be misleading if key inputs are missing, stale, or unrealistic.
- Very small or very large values may amplify rounding effects and interpretation risk.
- If assumptions change mid-decision, recalculate before acting.
Practical Tips
💡 Treat values as estimates, not exact measurements.
💡 Use consistent activity assumptions when comparing sessions.
💡 Track weekly totals to guide load progression.
Frequently Asked Questions
❓ Why is this not exact?
Actual burn varies by fitness level, effort, and physiology.
❓ Can I compare workouts with it?
Yes, it is useful for directional comparison under similar assumptions.