How to Use Strength Standards Calculator
The Strength Standards Calculator evaluates your performance on core lifts like the squat, bench press, and deadlift against established normative data. It categorizes your strength relative to others of similar body weight, gender, and experience, offering a clear picture of where you stand.
What It Does
Use the calculator with intent
The Strength Standards Calculator evaluates your performance on core lifts like the squat, bench press, and deadlift against established normative data. It categorizes your strength relative to others of similar body weight, gender, and experience, offering a clear picture of where you stand.
This tool is ideal for anyone looking to understand their physical strength more objectively. Beginners can use it to set initial, achievable goals, while intermediate and advanced lifters can track progress, identify plateaus, and benchmark themselves against national or international standards. Coaches can also use it to evaluate client progress and tailor training programs effectively.
Interpreting Results
The overall percentile and level blend every lift you entered relative to bodyweight and sex, so a single weak lift drags the whole picture down. Look at the per-lift breakdown to find the lift holding you back; that is usually where focused programming buys the fastest jump in your overall standing.
Input Steps
Field by field
- 1
Enter inputs
Enter your current body weight in kg. Standards are expressed relative to bodyweight, so a heavier lifter needs a higher absolute number to reach the same level.
- 2
Sex
Select your sex. The normative tables differ substantially, so the same absolute lift maps to a much higher percentile for women than for men.
- 3
Bench kg
Enter your best bench-press single. A bodyweight bench is roughly the Novice-to-Intermediate threshold for most men and an advanced mark for most women.
- 4
Squat kg
Enter your best squat single. Squat standards run higher than bench, so expect the level for the same multiple of bodyweight to be lower here.
- 5
Deadlift kg
Enter your best deadlift single. The deadlift carries the highest absolute standards, so it often sets the ceiling for your overall level.
- 6
Enter inputs
Enter your best overhead-press single. OHP standards are the lowest in absolute terms, so even a modest number can land at a respectable percentile relative to bodyweight.
Enter only the lifts you have tested honestly; leaving a lift blank is better than guessing, because one inflated entry skews the overall percentile.
Common Scenarios
Use realistic starting points
Baseline assumptions
Body Weight Kg
80
Sex
male
Bench Kg
80
Squat Kg
120
Start with overall percentile and compare it with overall level before changing anything.
Higher Body Weight Kg
Body Weight Kg
96
Sex
male
Bench Kg
80
Squat Kg
120
Watch how overall percentile shifts when body weight kg changes while the rest stays steady.
Same lifts, female
Body Weight Kg
80
Sex
female
Bench Kg
80
Squat Kg
120
The same 80 kg bench and 120 kg squat are far rarer for women, so the overall percentile climbs from about 30 (Novice) to about 55 (Intermediate).
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FAQ
Questions people ask next
The short answers readers usually want after the first pass.
How are these strength standards determined?
Are these strength standards accurate for everyone?
How often should I use this calculator to track my progress?
What if my result is 'Untrained' or 'Novice'?
Sources & References
- ExRx.net Strength Standards — ExRx.net
- Essentials of Strength Training and Conditioning — National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA)
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