🏊 Swimming Calorie Calculator
Calories burned by swimming stroke & duration
Written by Albert Mateos · Founder & Editor
Last reviewed: May 2, 2026
How it works
Calculate calories burned swimming by stroke type — freestyle, backstroke, breaststroke, or butterfly. Enter your weight, duration, and intensity for personalized results. Swimming is one of the best full-body workouts with low joint impact.
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter your body weight in kg or lbs.
- Enter swim duration in minutes.
- Select your stroke (freestyle, breaststroke, backstroke, butterfly).
- Choose intensity level (moderate or vigorous).
Example
Inputs: 70 kg swimmer, 30 min freestyle at moderate pace
Result: ~290 kcal burned
What it means: 30 minutes of moderate freestyle burns almost 300 kcal — swimming is one of the most calorie-dense full-body activities.
Tips
- Butterfly and freestyle burn the most calories per minute; breaststroke the least.
- Cold water increases calorie burn slightly as the body works to stay warm.
- Swimming doesn't suppress appetite the way running does — track intake carefully.
- Interval sets (e.g. 8x100m) burn more calories than steady laps of the same duration.
Learn More
Frequently Asked Questions
- How many calories does swimming burn?
- Swimming burns approximately 400 to 700 calories per hour depending on the stroke, intensity, and your body weight. Butterfly is the most demanding stroke, followed by freestyle, backstroke, and breaststroke. Even a moderate-paced freestyle session burns more calories per hour than most land-based activities because water resistance engages your entire body.
- Which swimming stroke burns the most calories?
- Butterfly burns the most calories at roughly 700 to 900 calories per hour for an average adult, but it is extremely demanding and hard to sustain. Freestyle (front crawl) is the most practical high-calorie-burning stroke, offering a strong burn of 500 to 700 calories per hour at a pace most swimmers can maintain. Breaststroke burns the least but is still highly effective compared to land-based exercise.
- Why does swimming feel like it burns more than other exercises?
- Water is about 800 times denser than air, so every movement requires significantly more energy to overcome resistance. Swimming also engages nearly every major muscle group simultaneously, unlike running or cycling which are primarily lower-body dominant. Additionally, your body expends extra energy maintaining core temperature in cooler water.