A brisk walk is an aerobic exercise.
Image Credit: Ocskaymark/iStock/GettyImages Walking is one of the simplest ways to get fit and maintain heart health. The Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans recommends that healthy adults should aim to walk a minimum of 150 minutes per week, or 30 minutes every weekday.
Advertisement
Walking seven days per week will burn more calories, and you can add challenges to your walking workout that make it more of a cardiovascular or strengthening exercise.
Video of the Day
Tip How many calories you burn walking briskly in 30 minutes every day, for seven days a week, depends mainly on how much you weigh currently.
Do the Math
Walking burns anywhere from 90 to 200 calories in 30 minutes. You burn fewer calories if you walk at the strolling rate of a 30-minute mile. You burn more calories walking at the brisk rate of a 17-minute mile.
Advertisement
The more you weigh and the less fit you are, the more calories are burned walking for 30 minutes. At these rates, you burn between 630 and 1,400 calories per week walking briskly for 30 minutes every day.
Vary Your Walking Workout
Vary your walking workout to keep it interesting and you will also burn more calories. Incorporate a couple of inclines into your walking route. If you exercise on a treadmill, set it at a slope for part of the time.
Advertisement
Walking more extreme inclines makes your workout more like hiking, which burns twice the amount of calories than walking on a flat route. A 155-pound person hiking over hillier terrain than a flat road burns 223 calories in 30 minutes says Harvard Health Publishing.
Add Strength Training
Add strengthening exercises to your walking workout to build muscle. Even though strength training does not burn considerable calories, it replaces your fat with lean muscle mass. Your body works harder to sustain your muscle mass, raising your resting metabolism so you burn more calories throughout the day. Invest in light hand weights or wrist weights and pump your hands as you walk.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Build lower body muscles by lifting your knees high during part of your walk. Stop every five minutes and do a series of squats or lunges. Or if you don't mind looking unique, incorporate a series of walking lunges while carrying dumbbells. A long lunge will work your glutes, while a short one targets your quads, says ExRx.net.
HIIT or Interval Training
As you get fit, you burn fewer calories doing the exact same workout. Shift your walking workout into a higher gear by doing interval training.
Advertisement
Start at a warmup pace for a couple of minutes and then walk at a brisk pace. Every five minutes, increase your pace to a sprint level, either by speed-walking, running or skipping rope. Maintain this burst of speed for 30 seconds. Return to a slow walk for a minute and then back to your vigorous pace before the next sprint.
You dramatically boost your heart rate during the sprints, and it stays raised during the recovery period, resulting in more calories burned, reports ACE Fitness.
Advertisement
Advertisement
references
Harvard Health Publishing: "Calories Burned in 30 Minutes for People of Three Different Weights"
ACE Fitness: "High-Intensity Interval Training: Why it Works"
ExRx.net: "Dumbbell Walking Lunge"
Health.gov: “Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans, 2nd Edition”
references
Harvard Health Publishing: "Calories Burned in 30 Minutes for People of Three Different Weights"
ACE Fitness: "High-Intensity Interval Training: Why it Works"
ExRx.net: "Dumbbell Walking Lunge"
Health.gov: “Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans, 2nd Edition”
A brisk walk is an aerobic exercise.
Image Credit: Ocskaymark/iStock/GettyImages
Image Credit: Ocskaymark/iStock/GettyImages
How many calories you burn walking briskly in 30 minutes every day, for seven days a week, depends mainly on how much you weigh currently.
Harvard Health Publishing: "Calories Burned in 30 Minutes for People of Three Different Weights"
ACE Fitness: "High-Intensity Interval Training: Why it Works"
ExRx.net: "Dumbbell Walking Lunge"
Health.gov: “Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans, 2nd Edition”