12 Best Fat-Burning Exercises, Ranked by Calories Burned

Reviewed byg1v.me Team
PublishedMay 27, 2026 · 8 min read
12 Best Fat-Burning Exercises, Ranked by Calories Burned

Introduction

Not all exercises burn fat equally. Here are 12 of the most effective fat-burning exercises ranked by calorie expenditure per minute, plus how to combine them for maximum results.

The concept of "fat-burning exercises" is slightly misleading. No exercise specifically targets body fat — all exercise burns calories, and a calorie deficit is what triggers fat loss. But some exercises burn significantly more calories per minute than others, which means they create a larger deficit in less time. To build core strength alongside the burn, add our ab workouts.

Here are 12 exercises ranked by their calorie-burning potential for a 155-pound person, based on CDC compendium data.

Table of Contents

Tier 1 — Highest burn (10+ calories per minute)

1. Running (8+ mph / 7:30 mile pace) — 14 cal/min

Running is the most accessible high-calorie-burn exercise. At a 7:30 mile pace, a 155-pound person burns roughly 375 calories in 30 minutes. Running recruits your entire lower body, core, and cardiovascular system.

Best for weight loss: Interval running (1 minute fast / 2 minutes moderate) burns more calories than steady pace running over the same duration.

2. Jumping rope — 12–14 cal/min

Jumping rope burns calories at a rate comparable to sprinting, but it's easier on your schedule — a 10-minute jumping rope session is genuinely challenging. It also improves coordination, agility, and bone density.

Best for weight loss: 3-minute rounds with 30-second rests, repeated 4–5 times.

3. Burpees — 12 cal/min

Burpees are the highest-calorie-burn bodyweight exercise. They engage your legs, chest, arms, and core simultaneously. Most people can't maintain burpees for more than 60–90 seconds, which makes them ideal for HIIT Workout circuits.

4. Rowing machine — 11–12 cal/min

Rowing engages 85% of your muscles — legs drive the stroke, core stabilizes, and arms pull. It's particularly effective because it's low-impact, so you can maintain intensity without joint stress.

Tier 2 — Strong burn (8–10 calories per minute)

5. Cycling (vigorous, 14–16 mph) — 10 cal/min

Stationary or outdoor cycling at a vigorous pace burns roughly 300 calories in 30 minutes. It's lower-impact than running and can be sustained longer, making the total calorie burn per session competitive.

Best for weight loss: HIIT-style intervals on a stationary bike — 30 seconds all-out, 30 seconds easy.

6. Swimming (vigorous laps) — 9–10 cal/min

Swimming is unique among these exercises because the water provides resistance in all directions, so you're working muscles through a full range of motion. The calorie burn is excellent, and the impact on joints is near zero.

7. Kettlebell swings — 9–10 cal/min

Kettlebell swings are a compound movement that works your hamstrings, glutes, core, and shoulders in one motion. A 2010 study found that 20 minutes of kettlebell swings burned as many calories as a 6-minute mile pace of running.

8. Stair climbing — 8–9 cal/min

The stair climber machine (or actual stairs) produces high calorie burn with low impact. It's particularly effective for the glutes and hamstrings. Thirty minutes of stair climbing burns roughly 250–280 calories.

Tier 3 — Moderate burn (6–8 calories per minute)

9. Walking (brisk, 3.5–4 mph) — 6 cal/min

Walking doesn't burn as many calories per minute as other exercises on this list, but it has one advantage none of them can match: you can do it for hours every day without getting injured or burned out. A 45-minute brisk walk burns about 180 calories. Doing that daily adds up to over 65,000 calories in a year — about 18 pounds.

10. Bodyweight strength circuit — 7–8 cal/min

A circuit of squats, push-ups, lunges, and planks done with minimal rest between exercises produces sustained calorie burn similar to moderate cardio, with the added benefit of muscle preservation.

11. Yoga (vigorous / power) — 5–6 cal/min

Vinyasa or power yoga at a fast pace provides moderate calorie burn plus muscular endurance and flexibility benefits. Not as efficient for pure calorie burn, but it supports recovery and reduces stress, which helps with weight loss indirectly.

12. Elliptical trainer — 6–7 cal/min

The elliptical provides a solid cardio workout with minimal joint impact. Its main drawback is that it's easy to fall into a rhythm that's not challenging enough to drive significant calorie burn — you need to actively push the resistance and pace.

How to combine them for maximum fat loss

The most effective approach isn't one exercise — it's a combination:

Primary: Strength Training for Weight Loss — 3 sessions per week (burns calories during + builds muscle for long-term metabolism)

Supplemental: Choose 2–3 exercises from Tier 1 or 2 for cardio conditioning — 2–3 sessions per week

Recovery: Walking (Tier 3) — daily, 30–60 minutes

This structure gives you high calorie burn from training sessions plus constant low-level calorie burn from daily walking plus increased resting metabolism from muscle gain.

For beginner-friendly program, see Gym Workouts to Lose Weight.

The truth about spot reduction

You cannot choose where your body loses fat. Doing hundreds of crunches will not reduce belly fat. Fat loss happens systemically — your body decides where to pull from based on genetics, hormones, and gender. The only reliable method is to reduce overall body fat through a Calorie Deficit Diet Plan combined with consistent exercise.

FAQ

How many calories does each exercise actually burn?

The exact number depends on your weight, intensity, and efficiency at the movement. A 155-pound person burns roughly 250 calories in 30 minutes of running at 6 mph, 220 calories in vigorous cycling, 180 calories in swimming, and 130 calories in brisk walking. These are estimates. Add 10 to 15 percent if you weigh more, subtract the same if you weigh less.

What's the best exercise for losing belly fat?

You cannot spot-reduce fat. Your body decides where it stores and burns fat based on genetics, hormones, and sex. Doing hundreds of crunches will not specifically burn belly fat. The only way to reduce belly fat is to lower your overall body fat percentage through a calorie deficit and consistent exercise. As your overall body fat drops, your midsection will eventually respond.

Should I exercise in the morning or evening?

The best time to exercise is whenever you will actually do it consistently. Performance is slightly higher in the afternoon when your body temperature peaks, but a morning workout that you complete is infinitely better than an afternoon workout you skip. A 2019 study in Cell Metabolism found that morning exercise may increase fat oxidation slightly, but the difference is small enough that consistency matters far more than timing.

How do I burn the most calories in the shortest time?

HIIT produces the highest calorie burn per minute of any exercise format. A 20-minute HIIT session can burn roughly the same number of calories as a 40-minute steady-state cardio session. The most efficient approach for overall results is to combine HIIT two to three times per week with strength training two to three times per week, plus daily walking for general activity.

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