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)
Calorie Burn by Weight and Intensity
| Play Style | 130 lbs | 160 lbs | 190 lbs | 220 lbs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Casual Doubles | 155 | 190 | 226 | 261 |
| Recreational Doubles | 220 | 270 | 321 | 372 |
| Competitive Doubles | 264 | 325 | 386 | 447 |
| Recreational Singles | 309 | 380 | 452 | 523 |
| Tournament / Intense | 382 | 470 | 559 | 647 |
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) | Calories | Intensity Minutes |
|---|---|---|
| Pickleball (rec. doubles) | 270 | 45-55 |
| Walking (3.5 mph) | 280 | 30-40 |
| Cycling (moderate) | 420 | 40-50 |
| Swimming (moderate) | 430 | 45-55 |
| Running (6 mph) | 640 | 55-60 |
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.
