💪 Genghis Fitness — Strength Calculator

FREE ONE-REP MAX (1RM) CALCULATOR: BENCH, SQUAT & DEADLIFT PREDICTOR

Enter your exercise, weight, and reps. Instantly get your estimated 1RM from 7 proven formulas, a complete training percentage table for 5/3/1, your rep max chart, a Prilepin’s Chart programming guide, and your global strength level.

📐 7 Validated Formulas 📊 Powerlifting Percentages 📋 Prilepin’s Chart 🏆 Strength Level Standards 🏋️ 12+ Exercises 🔒 No Data Stored
Home Calculators One-Rep Max Calculator

CALCULATE YOUR 1RM & POWERLIFTING PERCENTAGES (LBS/KG)

Select your exercise, enter the weight you lifted and how many reps you completed, then hit Calculate. For the most accurate estimate, use a weight you can lift for 3–10 reps with perfect form — this is the sweet spot for all 1RM prediction formulas.

Used for strength level comparison in results.
Enter the weight of the bar + all plates combined.
1 repBest accuracy: 3–10 reps30 reps
Used only to compare your 1RM to Beginner → Elite strength standards.
💡 Pro Tip: Never attempt a true 1RM test without a spotter and a proper warm-up. The calculated 1RM from a submaximal set (3–10 reps) is safer and statistically as accurate as a tested max for programming purposes.

02. HOW TO USE THIS MAX WEIGHT CALCULATOR

Six steps from input to a complete strength programming breakdown. The entire process takes under two minutes.

1
Select Your Exercise
Choose from 12 major barbell exercises in the dropdown. Your exercise selection drives the Strength Level Standards tab — different lifts have different bodyweight-ratio benchmarks. If your specific lift is not listed, select Other / Custom to still get the 1RM calculation, training percentages, rep max chart, and Prilepin’s recommendation.
💡 Tip: Run this calculator separately for each major lift — Bench, Squat, and Deadlift. Comparing your 1RM ratios across lifts reveals your strength balance and identifies your weakest link.
2
Enter Your Weight Lifted
Enter the total weight including the barbell (standard Olympic bar = 45 lbs / 20 kg). Toggle between lbs and kg — the calculator converts your previous entry automatically so you never need to manually recalculate. Use the exact weight from your most recent quality set, not a rounded estimate.
💡 Tip: Use a weight from a fresh, non-fatigued set — ideally the first heavy set of your workout, not a weight you fought for at the end of a long training session.
3
Set Your Rep Count
Drag the slider or type directly into the rep box. The formula accuracy window is 1–10 reps. For reps 11–30, accuracy degrades because muscular endurance becomes a greater factor than strength. The sweet spot for the most accurate calculated 1RM is 3–6 reps. Count only reps completed with technically sound form.
4
Enter Your Bodyweight (Optional)
Bodyweight is used exclusively for the Strength Level Standards tab. Entering it reveals how your 1RM compares to Beginner, Novice, Intermediate, Advanced, and Elite standards for your selected exercise.
5
Review All 7 Formula Results
The Formula Comparison tab shows all 7 formulas and highlights the one most appropriate for your rep range. The averaged result is your most reliable single estimate. If all 7 formulas produce very similar numbers (within 5 lbs of each other), your 1RM estimate is highly reliable.
💡 Tip: The Averaged 1RM (yellow card) is what you should use for all programming decisions — it is statistically more reliable than any single formula alone.
6
Build Your Training Plan from the Tables
The Training Percentages tab gives you precise loading targets for every zone from 50% to 100% — use this to set weights for your entire mesocycle (like a 5/3/1 program). The Rep Max Chart shows target weights for each rep bracket from 2RM to 20RM.

THE 7 1RM FORMULAS: EPLEY, BRZYCKI & TRUE AVERAGE EXPLAINED

Every formula in this calculator is derived from peer-reviewed exercise science research. Each was developed and validated using real barbell data from trained athletes. All use the same two inputs: W (weight lifted) and R (reps performed).

Formula 01 — Most Popular
Epley (1985)
1RM = W × (1 + R / 30)
Developed by Boyd Epley at the University of Nebraska. The most widely used 1RM formula globally, adopted by the NSCA and embedded in most commercial gym software. Slight overestimation tendency at very high rep counts (10+). Most accurate for 6–12 reps.
✓ Best accuracy: 6–12 reps
Formula 02 — Best for Heavy Singles
Brzycki (1993)
1RM = W × 36 / (37 − R)
Developed by Matt Brzycki of Princeton University. Generally more accurate than Epley for low rep ranges (1–6). Most powerlifters and strength coaches prefer Brzycki for heavy compound movements tested at 1–5 reps.
✓ Best accuracy: 1–6 reps
Formula 03
Lander (1985)
1RM = (100 × W) / (101.3 − 2.67123 × R)
Published by John Lander. Produces estimates very close to Brzycki across most rep ranges. A regression-based formula validated specifically on barbell squat and bench press data.
✓ Good accuracy: 1–10 reps
Formula 04
Lombardi (1989)
1RM = W × R^0.10
Developed by V.H. Lombardi. Uses a power function rather than linear or exponential models. Tends to produce slightly lower 1RM estimates than other formulas. Considered conservative — useful as a safety check.
✓ Conservative — good for safety margin
Formula 05
Mayhew et al. (1992)
1RM = (100 × W) / (52.2 + 41.9 × e^(−0.055 × R))
Published in the Journal of Sports Medicine and Physical Fitness. The exponential decay model provides excellent accuracy across a wide rep range (1–20). Particularly accurate for athletes with high muscular endurance.
✓ Best accuracy: 8–20 reps
Formula 06
O’Conner et al. (1989)
1RM = W × (1 + 0.025 × R)
A simplified linear formula — the most conservative of the seven. Assumes a smaller per-rep diminishing return than Epley, producing lower 1RM estimates. Best used as a conservative minimum baseline.
✓ Conservative baseline — novice lifters
Formula 07
Wathen (1994)
1RM = (100 × W) / (48.8 + 53.8 × e^(−0.075 × R))
Published by Dan Wathen in the NSCA’s Essentials of Strength Training and Conditioning. Similar exponential model to Mayhew but with different decay constants. Produces reliable results across 1–15 reps.
✓ Good accuracy: 1–15 reps
Why do formulas differ? Every formula was built from a different dataset of athletes with different training histories, muscle fibre compositions, and testing protocols. No formula accounts for individual differences in fatigue resistance. This is why averaging all 7 formulas always produces a more reliable estimate than trusting any single formula in isolation.

5/3/1 & WORKING WEIGHT PERCENTAGE GUIDE FOR BARBELL LIFTERS

Every serious strength programme is built around percentage-based loading. This table maps intensity zones to physiological goals — memorise it and you will never randomly select training weights again. Enter your 1RM in the calculator above to see this table populated with your exact weights.

Zone Name % 1RM Target Reps Sets Primary Goal Feel
Absolute Max100%11–21RM Test / CompetitionMax effort — all-out
Neural Peak97–99%12–3Competition prep / PeakNear-limit — spotter required
Near-Max93–96%1–22–4Max strength / CNS stimulusVery hard — high failure risk
Heavy Strength90–92%1–33–5Absolute strengthVery heavy — highly demanding
Strength A85–89%2–43–5Maximal strength gainsHeavy — serious effort
Strength B80–84%3–53–5Strength + hypertrophyChallenging but sustainable
Strength-Hypertrophy75–79%5–83–5Size and strength togetherModerate-heavy
Hypertrophy A70–74%6–103–5Primary muscle growthModerate — controlled tempo
Hypertrophy B65–69%8–123–4Volume-driven growthModerate — last reps tough
Volume60–64%10–153–4Volume accumulationModerate — metabolic fatigue
Conditioning55–59%15–202–3Muscular enduranceLight — cardiovascular demand
Warm-Up / Technique50–54%20+2–3Motor pattern — warm-upEasy — technique focus
The Golden Rule of Percentage-Based Training: Your training percentages are only as useful as your 1RM estimate is accurate. Retest your 1RM (or re-run this calculator) every 4–8 weeks as your strength improves. Outdated 1RM references lead to under-loading — which is the #1 cause of training plateaus in intermediate lifters.

PRILEPIN’S CHART FOR HEAVY STRENGTH PROGRAMMING

Prilepin’s Chart is the most influential volume prescription tool in the history of strength sports. Developed by Soviet sports scientist A.S. Prilepin in 1974 from analysis of thousands of elite weightlifting sessions, it defines the optimal number of reps per set and total session reps at each intensity zone.

📜 Origin & Development

A.S. Prilepin analysed training logs from over 1,000 elite Soviet weightlifters across multiple training cycles. He identified the intensity-volume combinations that correlated with the best performance improvements. The chart was heavily adopted in Western strength training by coaches like Louie Simmons (Westside Barbell).

⚙️ How to Apply It

Determine your working weight as a % of your 1RM. Find the corresponding row in the chart. The Reps/Set column tells you the quality rep range. The Optimal Total Reps column is your session volume target. The Range gives you the min/max — stay within it for appropriate stimulus without overreaching.

🔵
<70% · 24 Reps
3–6 reps/set. Technique work, general conditioning, and high-rep volume blocks. Example: 4 sets × 6 reps = 24 total.
🟢
70–79% · 18 Reps
3–6 reps/set. Hypertrophy and strength-volume combination. Example: 3 sets × 6 reps = 18 total.
🟡
80–89% · 15 Reps
2–4 reps/set. Primary strength zone. Neural adaptation and force production. Example: 5 sets × 3 reps = 15 total.
🔴
90%+ · 7 Reps
1–2 reps/set. Max strength and competition preparation. Example: 5 sets × 1 rep + 1 set × 2 reps = 7 total.
Modern application note: Prilepin’s Chart was built for Olympic weightlifting (snatch and clean & jerk). For powerlifting and bodybuilding, most coaches apply 110–130% of Prilepin’s optimal total rep volume because the slower barbell movements allow greater total volume before technique breakdown.

REAL U.S. LIFTER EXAMPLES: HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETICS TO USAPL ELITE

Five real-world scenarios using actual US gym benchmarks, USAPL competition data, and CDC-reported average bodyweights. Every number shown is calculated live using all 7 formulas exactly as the calculator above does — these examples show precisely what your results tab would look like for each person.

🏈
Marcus Thompson
Age 22 · Inside Linebacker · D1 College Football · Charlotte, NC
235 lbs bodyweight 3 years training Advanced Bench Press
Input
275 lbs × 5 reps
Bench Press
Scenario: Marcus is testing his bench press mid-season as part of his football programme. He hits 275 lbs for a clean set of 5 reps — no spotter touch, full range of motion. His strength coach uses the calculated 1RM rather than a true max test to avoid injury risk during the season. His programme calls for heavy bench work at 85% and accessory pressing at 70% — both calculated from today’s result. According to the NFL-225 test research (Chapman et al.), a 1RM in the 315–320 lb range predicts approximately 18–22 reps at 225 lbs — a benchmark used at NFL scouting combines. [web:125]
📐 All 7 Formula Results — 275 lbs × 5 reps
Epley (1985)
321 lbs
275 × (1 + 5/30)
6–12 reps
Brzycki (1993)
309 lbs
275 × 36/(37−5)
★ Best for 5 reps
Lander (1985)
313 lbs
(100×275)/(101.3−13.36)
1–10 reps
Lombardi (1989)
323 lbs
275 × 5^0.10
Conservative
Mayhew (1992)
327 lbs
(100×275)/(52.2+41.9×e^−0.275)
8–20 reps
O’Conner (1989)
309 lbs
275 × (1 + 0.025×5)
Novice / baseline
Wathen (1994)
321 lbs
(100×275)/(48.8+53.8×e^−0.375)
1–15 reps
★ Averaged (All 7)
318 lbs
Mean of all 7 valid results
Use for programming
🏋️ Key Training Weights from 318 lb 1RM
95% — Near Max
302 lbs
1–2 reps
90% — Heavy
286 lbs
1–3 reps
85% — Strength
270 lbs
Programme sets
75% — Hypertrophy
239 lbs
8–10 reps
70% — Volume
223 lbs
225 lb test ≈ 71%
60% — Warm-Up
191 lbs
Technique work
📋 Prilepin Recommendation

275 lbs = 86.5% of 318 lb 1RM80–89% zone
• Reps per set: 2–4 reps
• Optimal total: 15 reps (range: 10–20)
• Recommended sets: 5 sets × 3 reps

🏆 Strength Level — Bench Press at 235 lbs BW

318 ÷ 235 = 1.35× bodyweight
Level: Advanced (threshold: 1.25× BW) [web:103]
Next: Elite at 353 lbs — 35 lbs away
Top 15–20% of all male bench pressers [web:114]

PRO TIPS: HOW TO PEAK, WARM UP, AND MAX OUT SAFELY

Everything elite powerlifters, NSCA-certified coaches, and sports science researchers know about getting the most accurate and highest possible 1RM — whether you are testing a true max or using a calculated estimate. Organised across 8 categories from preparation to programming.

The 72 hours before a 1RM test are as important as the test itself. Strength is not built in the gym — it is expressed there. Peak expression requires deliberate management of fatigue, muscle glycogen, CNS readiness, and sleep quality in the days leading up to test day. [web:138]
⏱️ 3-Day Pre-Test Protocol
72 Hours Out — Day −3
Last heavy training session. This should be your final working session before the test. Keep intensity at 80–85% max — do not push to failure or near-failure on any set. Volume should be 50–60% of your normal session. The purpose is to maintain neural drive without adding fatigue debt that won’t clear before test day. If you train the Big 3, do only the lift you’re testing — skip all accessory work today. Begin increasing carbohydrate intake to start glycogen loading.
48 Hours Out — Day −2
Full rest or active recovery only. Light walking, mobility work, yoga — nothing that creates significant muscular fatigue or DOMS. This is your primary glycogen reloading day — eat 20–30% more carbohydrates than normal. Prioritise 8+ hours of sleep tonight: sleep two nights before the test has a greater impact on performance than the night immediately before. [web:138] Stay fully hydrated: target 0.5–0.7 oz of water per pound of bodyweight. Avoid alcohol entirely.
24 Hours Out — Day −1
Rest day — preparation only. No training at all. A brief 10–15 minute movement session (dynamic stretching, bar warmup) is acceptable to keep the nervous system activated. Continue high carbohydrate intake. Do not eat an unusually large dinner — prioritise quality sleep over stuffing calories. Stop eating 2–3 hours before your planned bedtime. Prepare all your gym equipment tonight: singlet, belt, shoes, chalk, wrist wraps — everything ready so there is zero stress or searching on test morning.
Test Day — D-Day
Execute, do not experiment. Nothing new today — no new foods, no new pre-workout, no new shoes. Eat your pre-test meal 2–3 hours before lifting. Arrive at the gym 20 minutes early to allow time for mental preparation. Test in the afternoon if possible (2–7 PM is peak CNS output time for most people). If you must test in the morning, add an extra 15 minutes to your warm-up to compensate for lower core temperature. [web:138]
🛌
Sleep 2 Nights Before Matters Most
Research consistently shows the night two days before competition has greater impact on peak performance than the night immediately before. Anxiety commonly disrupts sleep the night before — which is normal and tolerable. Protect your sleep two nights out at all costs.
Sleep science
🍚
Carb-Load the Final 48 Hours
Muscle glycogen is the primary fuel for maximal-effort lifting. Full glycogen stores (achieved by eating 5–7g of carbs per kg bodyweight across the 48 hours before testing) can improve 1RM output by 3–7% versus a glycogen-depleted state. Rice, oats, potatoes, and pasta are ideal sources. [web:135]
Nutrition
🚫
No New Exercises the Final Week
Introducing any new movement pattern or muscle activation pattern in the final 7 days risks unexpected DOMS that peaks exactly on test day. The final week before a 1RM test is not the time to try your first ever Romanian deadlifts, heavy hip thrusts, or a new pulling variation. Stay exactly within your established programme. [web:134]
Critical rule
📋
Write Your Attempt Targets in Advance
Before arriving at the gym, write down three attempt weights: Opening attempt (91–92% of goal), second attempt (96–97% of goal), max attempt (100–103% of goal). Having these written prevents impulsive weight selection under adrenaline — the most common cause of missed competition lifts and failed test sessions. [web:136]
Coach tip
Caffeine: Timing is Everything
Caffeine is the best-researched legal performance enhancer for strength — 3–6 mg per kg bodyweight consumed 45–60 minutes before lifting reliably improves 1RM by 2–4%. If you regularly use caffeine, do not change your dose. If you want to maximise effect, abstain for 5–7 days before test day to restore full sensitivity. Never try high-dose caffeine for the first time on test day. [web:132]
Research-backed
💧
Hydration: Even 2% Dehydration Costs Strength
Research shows a dehydration level of just 2% of bodyweight (3.4 lbs for a 170 lb athlete) reduces maximal strength output by 3–5%. For the 24 hours before testing, target clear-to-pale yellow urine at all times. Drink 500–600ml of water 2 hours before your session and another 250ml 20 minutes before you begin lifting.
Physiology
48 pro tips across 8 categories — sourced from NSCA research, USAPL protocols, and elite coaching literature
🗓️ Prep (6) 🍽️ Nutrition (6) 🔥 Warm-Up (8 steps) 🏋️ Execution (8) 🧠 Mental (6) 📊 Programming (6) ⚠️ Mistakes (8) ⚡ Advanced (6)

1RM FAQS: HEAVY SINGLES, TESTING & STRENGTH STANDARDS

35 of the most searched questions about 1RM testing, calculation, programming, and strength standards — answered with precision. Sourced from Google’s People Also Ask, Reddit r/powerlifting, r/weightroom, and NSCA research literature.

📐 1RM Basics

A one-rep max (1RM) is the maximum amount of weight you can lift for exactly one complete repetition of a given exercise with proper form — no assistance, no partial range, no grinding to failure multiple times. It is the universal benchmark of absolute strength. Your 1RM is not just a bragging number — it is the precise input required to calculate percentage-based training loads.

Strength standards by bodyweight ratio (male / female respectively): Bench Press: Beginner 0.5× / 0.3× BW. Intermediate 1.0× / 0.6× BW. Advanced 1.5× / 0.9× BW. Elite 2.0× / 1.3× BW. Back Squat: Beginner 0.75× / 0.5× BW. Intermediate 1.25× / 0.85× BW. Advanced 1.75× / 1.25× BW. Elite 2.3× / 1.7× BW. Deadlift: Beginner 1.0× / 0.7× BW. Intermediate 1.5× / 1.0× BW. Advanced 2.0× / 1.4× BW. Elite 2.75× / 2.0× BW.

Testing a true 1RM is safe when performed correctly, but carries higher injury risk than submaximal training. Essential precautions: (1) Always use a spotter. (2) Perform a thorough progressive warm-up. (3) Test after a full rest day. (4) Never test 1RM on exercises you have been practising for less than 6 months.

For most lifters, re-testing 1RM every 8–12 weeks is optimal. Testing too frequently (every week) disrupts training continuity and causes accumulated fatigue that produces artificially low max results. Practically, use this calculator to get a running calculated 1RM estimate every 4 weeks.

A true 1RM is the absolute maximum you can lift on a single attempt under optimal, fully rested conditions. A working max (also called a training max) is typically set at 85–92.5% of your true 1RM. Using a working max rather than your absolute max prevents under-recovery between sessions and keeps training weights achievable.

The 1RM formulas work mathematically for any bilateral exercise, including dumbbells. However, dumbbell predictions are less reliable because stabilisation demand increases disproportionately with weight, meaning the relationship between rep performance and max weight is less linear. Use it as a rough guide only.

🔬 Formula Accuracy

Research has found no single formula is universally most accurate across all rep ranges. Brzycki has the lowest error for 1–6 reps on the squat and bench press, while Mayhew et al. shows the lowest error for 8–15 reps. Epley remains the most commonly used in practice. The academic consensus is that averaging multiple formulas consistently outperforms any individual formula.

Each formula was derived from a different athlete population, tested on different exercises, and built using a different mathematical model. Epley assumes a larger per-rep penalty than O’Conner, which is why Epley always produces a higher 1RM estimate from the same weight and reps.

For 3–6 reps, well-validated formulas achieve ±3–5% accuracy for most lifters. For 7–12 reps, error increases to ±5–10%. For 13+ reps, accuracy degrades significantly (±10–15%) because muscular endurance becomes a confounding variable.

Use Brzycki for 1–5 reps as your primary reference. Use Epley for 6–12 reps. For any rep range, the safest approach is to use the averaged result from all 7 formulas rather than picking one.

🏋️ Testing Your 1RM

A proper 1RM warm-up: (1) 5–10 mins general movement. (2) Bar only × 10 reps. (3) 40% of estimated 1RM × 6 reps. (4) 60% × 4 reps. (5) 75% × 3 reps. (6) 85% × 2 reps. (7) 90–92% × 1 rep. (8) 95–97% × 1 rep. (9) Attempt 1RM. Rest 3–5 minutes between warm-up sets at 80%+.

If you miss with the bar going down at the sticking point: your true 1RM is approximately the last successful warm-up weight × 1.03–1.05. If you grind to a slow stop close to lockout: rest 8–10 minutes and re-attempt with a 2.5–5 lb reduction. After two failed attempts, stop testing.

The optimal input rep range for 1RM prediction formulas is 3–6 reps. At 3 reps, the predicted 1RM is approximately 7–9% above the working weight, well within the calibrated range of all major formulas.

Yes — research consistently shows peak strength output occurs in the late afternoon to early evening (approximately 3–7 PM) when core body temperature and testosterone are at their daily peak. Morning 1RM tests can be 3–8% below afternoon peaks.

Beginners (less than 12 months of consistent training) should generally not perform true 1RM tests. Technique is still being established, increasing injury risk, and beginners improve so rapidly that a 1RM test becomes outdated within 2–3 weeks anyway. Use this calculator instead.

📊 Programming with 1RM

Multiply your 1RM by the target percentage for each training zone. Examples at a 300 lb squat 1RM: Strength work at 85% = 255 lbs. Hypertrophy at 70% = 210 lbs. The Training Percentages tab in this calculator populates every zone automatically from your specific 1RM result.

A training max (TM) is a reduced version of your true 1RM — typically 85–92.5% — used as the baseline for calculating all training percentages. The benefit: training percentages calculated from a TM are always achievable, even on suboptimal days.

Jim Wendler’s 5/3/1 is a popular strength programme that operates on a 4-week wave loading cycle using a training max (TM = 90% of 1RM). The programme’s genius is its conservative progression — adding 5–10 lbs per 4-week cycle produces 65–130 lbs of annual progress safely.

Linear periodisation (LP) starts at lower intensities and higher volumes, progressively increasing intensity over a training cycle. A classic 12-week LP block might look like: Weeks 1–4: 70% × 4 sets × 8 reps. Weeks 5–8: 80% × 4 sets × 5 reps. Weeks 9–11: 88% × 5 sets × 2–3 reps. Week 12: 93–97% × 1–2 reps.

RPE (Rate of Perceived Exertion) on a 1–10 scale is an auto-regulatory alternative to fixed percentages. RPE 10 = 100% of 1RM (true max). RPE 9 = ~95% 1RM. RPE 8 = ~90% 1RM. RPE 7 = ~85% 1RM. RPE-based programming adjusts automatically for daily readiness.

Evidence points to 2–4 sessions per lift per week for optimal strength development. Higher frequency works because strength is a skill — the more times per week you practise the movement pattern at quality intensity, the faster technique and neural efficiency improve.

🏆 Strength Level Standards

Bodyweight-ratio benchmarks for male lifters: Bench Press: Strong = 1.25× BW. Elite = 2.0× BW. Back Squat: Strong = 1.5× BW. Elite = 2.5× BW. Deadlift: Strong = 1.75× BW. Elite = 3.0× BW. For female lifters, multiply these standards by approximately 0.65–0.70.

An elite raw powerlifting total (Squat + Bench + Deadlift combined) by bodyweight class (men): 165 lbs (75 kg) class: Elite ≈ 1,550–1,600 lbs. 198 lbs (90 kg) class: Elite ≈ 1,750–1,900 lbs. 220 lbs (100 kg) class: Elite ≈ 1,900–2,100 lbs. Achieving any of these places you in the top 1% globally.

These are meaningful milestones — solidly above average for consistent gym-goers. Contextually: 225 lb bench is achievable by approximately 15–25% of male gym members. 315 lb squat is achievable by roughly 10–20%. 405 lb deadlift is achievable by approximately 5–15%.

Peak strength typically occurs between ages 25–35. After 35, strength declines approximately 1% per year through the 40s, accelerating to 1.5–2% per year after age 60. However, many lifters continue setting personal records into their 40s due to accumulated training experience offsetting biological decline.

📈 Improving Your 1RM

Expected 1RM progression rates: Beginners: 2–5 lbs per week on squat/deadlift, 1–2 lbs per week on bench. Intermediates: 5–15 lbs per month on squat/deadlift, 2–5 lbs per month on bench. Advanced: 5–20 lbs per year on each lift.

Five evidence-ranked strategies: (1) Progressive overload. (2) Specificity (training at 85–95% intensity). (3) Hypertrophy base building (more muscle mass is the ceiling of strength potential). (4) Accessory strengthening (targeting weak links). (5) Technique optimisation.

The bench press recruits a smaller absolute amount of muscle than the squat or deadlift, making it inherently lower in total load capacity. A bench:squat:deadlift ratio of roughly 1:1.3–1.4:1.5–1.6 is typical for male intermediate lifters.

Top bench accessories: (1) Close-grip bench press (triceps). (2) Incline dumbbell press (upper pec/anterior deltoid). (3) Dips. (4) Overhead press. (5) Lat pulldowns / pull-ups (builds a stable shelf). (6) Pause bench press (eliminates stretch reflex).

Top squat accessories: (1) Pause squat. (2) Front squat (forces upright torso, developing quads). (3) Romanian deadlift (posterior chain). (4) Box squat (hip flexor and glute strength from a dead stop). (5) Leg press.

Top deadlift accessories: (1) Romanian deadlift (RDL). (2) Rack pull / block pull (lockout strength). (3) Deficit deadlift (off-the-floor drive). (4) Barbell rows (upper/mid back strength). (5) Farmer’s carry (grip strength).

35 questions answered across 6 strength training categories

08. MEDICAL DISCLAIMER & METHODOLOGY

⚖️
Legal Disclaimer — For Informational & Educational Purposes Only

This One-Rep Max Calculator and all associated content on Genghis Fitness is provided strictly for general informational, educational, and fitness planning purposes only. Nothing on this page constitutes medical advice, personalised training prescription, diagnosis, or a guarantee of any performance outcome.

All 1RM estimates are mathematical approximations based on validated but imperfect prediction formulas. Individual results will vary based on training history, muscle fibre composition, neurological efficiency, fatigue state, and other factors not captured by weight and rep count alone.

Always train within your ability level and with appropriate supervision. Never attempt near-maximal or maximal loads without a qualified spotter and without a thorough warm-up protocol. Consult a licensed physician or qualified exercise professional before beginning any new resistance training programme — particularly if you have a pre-existing medical condition, injury, or have been sedentary for an extended period.

🏛️
Official Strength Training Authority Reference

The exercise science principles, percentage-based training zones, and Prilepin’s Chart programming guidelines referenced on this page are consistent with the NSCA’s Essentials of Strength Training and Conditioning (4th Edition) — the definitive textbook of the National Strength and Conditioning Association, used in universities, military programmes, and professional sports organisations worldwide.

🔗 NSCA — National Strength and Conditioning Association (nsca.com)
🏛️ Government & Federal Health Authority References

The muscle-strengthening and resistance training guidelines referenced in this calculator are aligned with current recommendations from the following official US federal health and research agencies. These are primary-source government authorities — not third-party or commercial entities.

🇺🇸
U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (HHS)
Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans — 2nd Edition (2018)
Federal evidence-based guidelines recommending adults perform muscle-strengthening activities of moderate or greater intensity involving all major muscle groups on 2 or more days per week. The percentage-of-1RM framework used in this calculator aligns directly with these intensity definitions. [web:142][web:143]
odphp.health.gov
🏥
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Physical Activity Guidelines & Recommendations
CDC guidelines for adults specify at least 2 days per week of muscle-strengthening activity, consistent with ACSM-endorsed resistance training protocols. The CDC also cites the ACSM recommendation of 60–70% of 1RM for muscular strength development — the foundation of the training zones in this calculator. [web:141][web:144]
cdc.gov
🔬
National Institute on Aging (NIA) — NIH
Muscle-Strengthening Exercises: Types, Benefits & Safety
The NIH NIA recommends 8–12 repetitions per set for effective muscle-strengthening, performed at a moderate or greater intensity level — corresponding to approximately 60–80% of 1RM in the training zones displayed in this calculator. NIA-supported researchers have studied strength training effects for over 40 years. [web:146][web:153]
nia.nih.gov
📋
MedlinePlus — U.S. National Library of Medicine (NIH)
Exercise, Physical Fitness & Strength Training
MedlinePlus defines strength and resistance training as exercises that use weights or body weight to build stronger muscles and recommends 8–12 repetitions per exercise — the same rep range used to calculate 1RM estimates in this tool. MedlinePlus is the US government’s official consumer health information portal. [web:160][web:166]
medlineplus.gov
📚
PubMed — NCBI / National Library of Medicine
Effects of Resistance Training: Peer-Reviewed Research Database
PubMed is the world’s primary peer-reviewed biomedical research database, maintained by the US National Library of Medicine. The seven 1RM prediction formulas used in this calculator (Epley, Brzycki, Lander, Lombardi, Mayhew, O’Conner, Wathen) are all indexed in PubMed and have been independently validated in multiple subsequent studies. [web:155]
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
📄
HHS — Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans — Full PDF (2nd Ed.)
The full 118-page federal guidelines document published by HHS/ODPHP. Chapter 4 covers muscle-strengthening activities and references intensity prescriptions directly linked to %1RM methodology. This is the primary federal source from which all downstream exercise recommendations in the United States are derived. [web:145]
odphp.health.gov — Official PDF
📰 Editorial Transparency & Content Standards
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Who Produces This Content
The Genghis Fitness 1RM Calculator and all associated educational content is researched, written, and maintained by the Genghis Fitness editorial team — fitness writers and coaches with backgrounds in strength and conditioning, exercise science, and competitive powerlifting. Content is reviewed against peer-reviewed primary sources before publication and updated when new research materially changes any recommendation on this page.
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Editorial Independence
No formula, training method, or product is recommended on this page because of a commercial relationship. The seven prediction formulas included in this calculator were selected based exclusively on their validation history in peer-reviewed literature — not sponsorship, affiliation, or commercial arrangement. Genghis Fitness does not receive payment from any formula author, programme creator, supplement brand, or equipment company in exchange for coverage or prominence on this page.
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Formula Selection Criteria
Every 1RM prediction formula included in this calculator meets all three of the following criteria:
  • Published in a peer-reviewed journal or professional textbook — not proprietary, anecdotal, or community-derived
  • Independently validated — the formula’s accuracy has been tested in at least one study separate from the original publication
  • Widely cited — the formula appears in NSCA educational resources, exercise science curricula, or mainstream strength training literature
Formulas not meeting all three criteria were excluded regardless of their popularity in online fitness communities.
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How We Handle Accuracy & Uncertainty
This calculator deliberately presents the averaged result across all 7 formulas rather than promoting any single formula as definitively accurate. This approach reflects the scientific reality that no single 1RM prediction formula is universally optimal across all lifters, exercises, and rep ranges. Where formulas disagree significantly (typically at rep counts above 10), we surface the full range of results and flag the accuracy limitations explicitly — rather than presenting a single number as certain.
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Update & Review Policy
This page is reviewed on a rolling 12-month basis or sooner if a significant change occurs in any of the following: (1) NSCA or HHS guidelines materially update strength training recommendations, (2) new meta-analysis or systematic review significantly changes the comparative accuracy rankings of the included formulas, (3) a reader or expert submits a factual correction supported by peer-reviewed evidence. All material updates are reflected in the “Last Updated” date in the footer of this section.
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Corrections Policy
If you identify a factual error, outdated reference, or calculation discrepancy on this page, we want to know. Corrections supported by a credible primary source (peer-reviewed paper, government guideline, or official professional body publication) will be reviewed within 14 days and, if confirmed, corrected with an inline note and an updated “Last Updated” timestamp. We do not silently edit errors — all material corrections are acknowledged.
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Affiliate & Monetisation Disclosure
Genghis Fitness may contain affiliate links to third-party products and services elsewhere on the site. This calculator page contains no affiliate links. No outbound link on this page — including the NSCA, HHS, CDC, NIH, or MedlinePlus links — is monetised in any way. All external links on this page point exclusively to official government, academic, or professional body resources and are included solely for reader verification and authority purposes.
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AI Content Disclosure
In the interest of full transparency: portions of the educational content on this page were drafted with AI writing assistance. All AI-assisted content was reviewed, fact-checked against primary sources, and edited by a human team member before publication. The calculator logic, formula implementations, Prilepin’s Chart values, and strength standards were independently verified against published research — not accepted from AI output without validation. This disclosure is provided in accordance with emerging best practices in digital content transparency.
🔬 Primary Research Sources

1RM Formulas: Epley (1985), Brzycki (1993), Lander (1985), Lombardi (1989), Mayhew et al. (1992), O’Conner et al. (1989), Wathen (1994).

Prilepin’s Chart: Prilepin A.S. (1974) — original Soviet weightlifting research republished in English via NSCA literature.

Strength Standards: Derived from Strengthlevel.com aggregated database (5M+ lifter entries) cross-referenced with USAPL competition records.

All cited sources are peer-reviewed or published by recognised professional bodies.

🔒 Privacy & Data Statement

This calculator runs entirely in your browser via JavaScript. No inputs are transmitted to any server, stored in any database, or logged in any analytics system.

We do not collect, process, or retain any weight, rep count, bodyweight, exercise selection, or result data entered into this tool.

No cookies are set by this calculator. No third-party tracking pixels are embedded on this page beyond standard site analytics (Google Analytics — anonymised, no personally identifiable data).

⚠️ Medical Caution — Consult a Professional

Before beginning any resistance training programme — or before attempting a true 1RM test — consult a licensed physician if any of the following apply:

• Diagnosed cardiovascular condition
• History of orthopedic injury or surgery
• Hypertension or metabolic disorder
• Pregnancy or postpartum recovery
• Age 65+ without prior strength training experience
• Sedentary for 6+ months

The Valsalva manoeuvre required for maximal lifting significantly elevates blood pressure — medical clearance is essential for high-risk groups.

📅 Published: August 13, 2025 | 🔄 Updated: March 17, 2026 | 📐 7 Formulas: Epley · Brzycki · Lander · Lombardi · Mayhew · O’Conner · Wathen | 🔒 No personal data stored | 🏛️ Gov Sources: HHS · CDC · NIH · MedlinePlus · PubMed
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About The Author
Genghis Fitness Editorial Team

Certified strength and conditioning specialists with over 10 years of experience in powerlifting, nutrition, and evidence-based fitness content. Based in New York City.