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Strength Training Worked Examples

Strength Standards Examples

Strength standards give you context that raw numbers alone don't provide. Knowing you squat 100 kg means little without knowing whether that's recreational, intermediate, or competitive relative to your bodyweight and age. These examples map real-world scenarios against published benchmarks across fitness levels.

By AI Fit Hub · AI Fit Hub Team
Best Next MoveStrength

Strength Standards Calculator

Rank your lifts from Beginner to Elite based on bodyweight ratios.

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Education · Not medical advice. Output is deterministic math from your inputs.Editorial standardsSponsor disclosureCorrections

Worked Examples

See the inputs and outcome together

Each scenario keeps the starting point, the outcome, and the actual lesson in one place so the page reads like a decision notebook, not a data dump.

  1. 1

    Baseline male lifter

    An 80 kg man enters bench 80 kg, squat 120 kg, deadlift 140 kg, and overhead press 50 kg.

    All four lifts rate Novice, giving an overall Novice level near the 29th percentile.

    Body Weight Kg

    80

    Sex

    Male

    Bench Kg

    80

    Squat Kg

    120

    Deadlift Kg

    140

    Ohp Kg

    50

    The tool scores each lift as a ratio to bodyweight, so a bodyweight bench and a 1.75x deadlift both land Novice here. Tracking the per-lift ratios shows which lift is lagging the rest.

  2. 2

    Stronger lifter

    The same 80 kg man with stronger numbers: bench 100, squat 150, deadlift 180, overhead press 65 kg.

    Every lift moves up to Intermediate, lifting the overall level to Intermediate near the 44th percentile.

    Body Weight Kg

    80

    Sex

    Male

    Bench Kg

    100

    Squat Kg

    150

    Deadlift Kg

    180

    Ohp Kg

    65

    Adding 20 to 40 kg across the lifts jumps the whole profile a full tier. The standards are ratio-based, so at a fixed bodyweight your level tracks the bar weight directly.

  3. 3

    Same lifts, heavier body

    The baseline lifts again, but now from a 100 kg lifter rather than 80 kg.

    The same weights now rate mostly Beginner, dropping the overall level to Beginner near the 18th percentile.

    Body Weight Kg

    100

    Sex

    Male

    Bench Kg

    80

    Squat Kg

    120

    Deadlift Kg

    140

    Ohp Kg

    50

    Identical bar weights rate lower for a heavier lifter, since the standard expects bigger people to lift more. Relative strength, not absolute, is what these tiers reward.

  4. 4

    Female lifter

    A 63 kg woman with bench 45, squat 70, deadlift 90, and overhead press 28 kg.

    The lifts rate Novice on the female standards, for an overall level near the 32nd percentile.

    Body Weight Kg

    63

    Sex

    Female

    Bench Kg

    45

    Squat Kg

    70

    Deadlift Kg

    90

    Ohp Kg

    28

    The female table uses lower bodyweight ratios, so a 90 kg deadlift at 63 kg rates competitively. Always set the sex correctly, since comparing against the wrong table understates real progress.

Patterns

Strength standards must be context-specific (general fitness vs. elite performance vs. occupational demands) to be truly meaningful and actionable.
Beyond raw numbers, the *ratio* of strength to bodyweight or task-specific performance often provides more valuable insights into an individual's capabilities.
Using strength standards proactively, especially in youth athletic development or occupational settings, is a powerful tool for injury prevention and long-term health.
Strength standards are dynamic; they should evolve with an individual's goals, age, specific job requirements, and overall physical development.

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General fitness estimates — not medical advice. Consult a healthcare professional for medical decisions.