You've probably heard that muscle burns more calories than fat—and that's true. Muscle is more metabolically active than fat. While it's not the miracle fat-burner that many might hope it to be, muscle does burn fat and can help you lose weight.
How Many Calories Does Muscle Burn?
Muscle doesn't burn fat directly, but having more muscle mass means you burn more calories at the same body weight than if you had less muscle mass. Muscle is metabolically active tissue that requires energy to maintain, whereas fat tissue is not. Building muscle by strength training increases your calorie burn to help you burn fat.
Calorie Burn Per Pound of Muscle
There is a longstanding myth that says that if you put on 5 pounds of muscle (which is a challenge, even for young men), you could burn an extra 250 calories a day at rest (i.e., one pound of muscle burns 50 calories). The problem with these numbers is that there aren't any real studies to back them up.
In at least one discussion of caloric expenditure, researchers at the University of New Mexico explain that the metabolic rate of muscle tissue has been loosely estimated to range between 4.5 to 7.0 calories per pound of body weight per day. Based on this fact, they estimate that muscle tissue contributes approximately 20% of your total daily calories burned versus 5% for fat tissue (for individuals with about 20% body fat). They add, however, that the combined energy expenditure of the heart, lungs, kidneys, brain, and liver is substantially more significant than the expenditure of fat and muscle tissue.
Recent studies that confirm these estimates are lacking. There is also confusion because researchers use different ways to test metabolic changes after exercise. In addition, other mechanisms involved in metabolism affect how many calories you burn—gender, age, fitness level, activity level, and more.
Because of that, there's controversy around how much exercise influences metabolism. Just like target heart rate zones or the number of calories you burn exercising aren't exact, neither is this.
The Power of Lifting Weights
Given this information, you might wonder whether you should continue strength training if you're trying to lose weight. The short answer is yes. You may not burn an extra 250 calories a day by putting on muscle, but you are still Improving other areas in your life such as mood, sleep, and cognitive function while decreasing anxiety and stress. In addition, you will be less at risk for diseases such as osteoporosis, type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, and cancer.
Strength training is important for losing fat and keeping your body strong and healthy. In fact, maintaining your muscle mass and gaining lean tissue is often what keeps people from gaining weight as they get older. Also, strength training aids with independence as we age. It helps us to do things we take for granted at a younger age such as walking, getting up from bed, cooking, and washing ourselves. These are just a few of strength training's powerful benefits.
Here's what else strength training can do:
- Burns extra calories for up to 72 hours after your workout—known as afterburn. This is especially true with high-intensity strength training.
- Changes your body composition, helping shape your body and keep you healthy.
- Improves coordination and balance and may help prevent injuries.
- Prevents the loss of lean body mass from weight loss and/or aging. Weight gain often happens as your metabolism slows over time.
- Strengthens bones and connective tissue along with muscles.
A Word From Verywell
Strength training is important for almost any fitness goal, whether you want to lose fat, gain muscle, or just get in better condition. Focusing on the process of getting your body stronger and fitter is often more motivating than worrying about how many calories you're burning.