Fidgeting can burn about 350 calories a day.
Fidgeting Burns 350 Calories Daily
That colleague who can't stop bouncing their leg during meetings? They might be accidentally burning an extra 350 calories a day without setting foot in a gym.
Dr. James A. Levine from the Mayo Clinic discovered this phenomenon while studying why some people gain weight more easily than others. His research revealed that fidgeting—those constant micro-movements like foot-tapping, pen-clicking, hair-twirling, and shifting in your chair—adds up to significant calorie expenditure over the course of a day.
The Science of Squirming
This extra calorie burn falls under something scientists call NEAT: Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis. That's the technical term for all the energy you burn doing everything except sleeping, eating, or formal exercise. Walking to the bathroom, typing, standing up, sitting down, and yes, fidgeting.
When researchers compared fidgeters to their calmer counterparts living in identical environments, they found fidgeters could burn up to 2,000 more calories per day. The 350-calorie figure represents a conservative average, but even that's equivalent to a 30-minute jog or three candy bars.
Why Some People Can't Sit Still
Interestingly, studies show that naturally lean people tend to fidget more than those who struggle with weight. It's not clear if the fidgeting causes the leanness or if naturally lean people just have more restless energy to burn, but the correlation is striking.
The calorie burn varies based on several factors:
- Intensity: Vigorous leg bouncing burns more than gentle finger-tapping
- Body weight: Heavier people burn more calories performing the same movements
- Duration: All-day fidgeters obviously burn more than occasional squirmers
- Type of movement: Fidgeting while standing burns 38% more calories than while sitting, which still burns 29% more than lying completely still
The Fidget Factor
Before you start deliberately bouncing your knee to lose weight, know that forced fidgeting doesn't seem to work the same way as natural restlessness. Your body is smart—it compensates. If you burn extra calories through conscious fidgeting, you'll likely feel hungrier or move less later.
But for natural fidgeters, this is excellent news: your "annoying habit" is actually a metabolic advantage. Every toe-tap, shoulder roll, and unconscious dance move in your chair is keeping your metabolism humming along without any effort or gym membership required.
So the next time someone tells you to sit still, you have science on your side. You're not being disruptive—you're optimizing your NEAT.