Kilojoule to Calorie (nutritional)

kJ

1 kJ

cal

238.84589662749593961976 cal

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Quick Reference Table (Kilojoule to Calorie (nutritional))

Kilojoule (kJ)Calorie (nutritional) (cal)
1238.84589662749593961976
4.184999.33123148944301136906
8.3681,998.66246297888602273813
10023,884.58966274959396197573
500119,422.94831374796980987867
1,000238,845.89662749593961975733
8,4002,006,305.53167096589280596159

About Kilojoule (kJ)

A kilojoule (kJ) equals 1,000 joules and is one of the most practical SI energy units for everyday human-scale work. Food energy is commonly labelled in kilojoules in Australia, the EU, and many other countries — the same information that the US labels in Calories. Physical exercise and metabolic rates are often quoted in kilojoules per hour. One kilojoule is roughly the energy released by a small firecracker, or the kinetic energy of a tennis ball traveling at 160 km/h.

A 100 mL glass of orange juice contains about 180 kJ of food energy. Running 1 km burns approximately 200–300 kJ depending on body weight.

About Calorie (nutritional) (cal)

The nutritional calorie (cal, sometimes written Cal with capital C) is defined as 4.1868 joules — the International Table calorie. In food science and on nutrition labels, what is called a "calorie" is technically a kilocalorie: the energy to raise one kilogram of water by one degree Celsius. This naming convention causes persistent confusion. A banana "containing 90 calories" actually contains 90 kilocalories (kcal) = 376,812 joules. The unit is used in food labeling outside the US and EU, which mostly label in kJ or kcal.

A medium banana provides about 90 kcal (nutritional). The average adult requires roughly 2,000–2,500 kcal (nutritional) per day.


Kilojoule – Frequently Asked Questions

Australia, New Zealand, and the EU mandate SI-based labeling, so food packages list energy in kilojoules. The US and Canada stuck with kilocalories (branded as "Calories"). To convert, divide kJ by 4.184 — a 500 kJ snack bar is about 120 kcal. Most Australian shoppers learn the kJ scale by familiarity rather than converting every time.

A 70 kg person walking briskly at 5.5 km/h burns roughly 600–700 kJ in 30 minutes (about 150–170 kcal). That is roughly one banana or a small flat white. Running the same distance roughly triples the kilojoule burn because the body must lift itself off the ground with every stride.

They measure the same thing — food energy — in different units. One kilocalorie (kcal) equals 4.184 kilojoules (kJ). European and Australian labels show both; US labels show only kcal (labelled "Calories"). A 2,000 kcal/day diet is 8,368 kJ/day. Nutritionists consider the two interchangeable for dietary guidance.

A typical smartphone battery rated at 15 Wh holds about 54 kJ. That is roughly the food energy in a single sugar cube (17 kJ per cube times three). A laptop battery at 60 Wh stores about 216 kJ, and a Tesla Model 3 battery pack at 60 kWh stores 216,000 kJ — enough dietary energy to feed a person for about 25 days.

It is a middle-ground unit — too large for electronics (which use millijoules) and too small for household energy bills (which use megajoules or kWh). One kilojoule is the kinetic energy of a tennis ball served at about 160 km/h, the energy in a small sip of juice, or the heat generated by a 100 W bulb in ten seconds. It sits at the human snack-and-exercise scale.

Calorie (nutritional) – Frequently Asked Questions

In the late 19th century, nutritionists adopted the kilocalorie as the practical unit for food energy but dropped the "kilo" prefix in everyday speech. A banana labelled "90 calories" actually contains 90 kilocalories (90,000 small calories). Some labels use a capital "C" (Calorie) to distinguish it from the small calorie, but this convention is inconsistently applied and remains a source of confusion worldwide.

One kcal (kilocalorie) equals 1,000 cal (calories). European and Australian labels typically show energy in both kJ and kcal explicitly. US labels use "Calories" (capital C), which actually means kcal. If a label says 200 Calories, it means 200 kcal = 200,000 small calories = 836.8 kJ. The small calorie (4.1868 J) is rarely seen outside laboratory contexts.

Adults typically need 1,600–2,500 kcal per day depending on sex, age, weight, and activity level. Sedentary women average about 1,800 kcal; active men about 2,500 kcal. Endurance athletes during competition can burn 4,000–8,000 kcal/day. These figures are based on the International Table calorie (4.1868 J), though the thermochemical calorie gives near-identical results in practice.

Australia, New Zealand, and EU member states mandate SI-based labeling, so they use kilojoules (kJ) as the primary energy unit. The US and Canada use kilocalories (labelled as "Calories"). To convert, multiply kcal by 4.1868 to get kJ, or divide kJ by 4.1868 for kcal. A 2,000 kcal daily diet equals 8,374 kJ.

Wilbur Atwater and colleagues in the 1890s used bomb calorimeters to burn food samples and measure heat released. They established that carbohydrates yield ~4 kcal/g, protein ~4 kcal/g, and fat ~9 kcal/g — the Atwater factors still printed on food labels today. Modern methods use chemical analysis and Atwater factors rather than direct calorimetry for every product.

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