1 Hour Pickleball Calories

One hour of pickleball burns 190 to 470 calories depending on your weight, play intensity, and whether you are playing singles or doubles. A 160-pound person playing recreational doubles burns about 270 calories per hour, while competitive singles can burn up to 470 calories in the same time. Pickleball’s stop-and-go pattern makes it an efficient calorie burner that does not feel like a traditional workout.

Calories Burned in 1 Hour of Pickleball

By Play Intensity (160-lb player)

0108216324432540190Casual270Recreational325Competitive380Singles470TournamentSource: Aggregated fitness tracking data

Calorie Burn by Weight and Intensity

Play Style130 lbs160 lbs190 lbs220 lbs
Casual Doubles155190226261
Recreational Doubles220270321372
Competitive Doubles264325386447
Recreational Singles309380452523
Tournament / Intense382470559647

What Happens in 1 Hour of Pickleball

In a typical hour of doubles pickleball, you are actively moving for about 25-35 minutes. The rest is spent between points, switching sides, and taking brief breaks. During active play, you cover approximately 1.2-1.8 miles through lateral shuffles, forward sprints, and backpedaling. Your heart rate spikes during rallies and recovers between points, creating a natural interval training effect.

1 Hour Pickleball vs Other Activities

Activity (1 hour, 160 lbs)CaloriesIntensity Minutes
Pickleball (rec. doubles)27045-55
Walking (3.5 mph)28030-40
Cycling (moderate)42040-50
Swimming (moderate)43045-55
Running (6 mph)64055-60

How to Burn More Calories in 1 Hour

  • Play singles: Covering the full court burns 30-40% more calories than doubles
  • Increase rally intensity: Harder shots and faster play elevate heart rate
  • Minimize downtime: Keep transitions short between games
  • Play outdoors in warmth: Heat increases metabolic demand by 5-10%

Calculate Your Exact Burn

Use our Pickleball Benchmark Calculator to enter your weight, playing time, format, and intensity for personalized calorie, heart rate, and intensity minute calculations.

Related Pages