🏋 Bench Press Calculator by Age & Weight
Find your estimated 1-rep max, strength level, and training weights based on your age, gender, and body weight
| Body Weight | Beginner | Novice | Intermediate | Advanced | Elite |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 114 lbs (52 kg) | 75 lbs | 115 lbs | 150 lbs | 195 lbs | 245 lbs |
| 132 lbs (60 kg) | 90 lbs | 135 lbs | 175 lbs | 225 lbs | 285 lbs |
| 148 lbs (67 kg) | 105 lbs | 155 lbs | 200 lbs | 260 lbs | 325 lbs |
| 165 lbs (75 kg) | 115 lbs | 170 lbs | 220 lbs | 285 lbs | 360 lbs |
| 181 lbs (82 kg) | 130 lbs | 190 lbs | 245 lbs | 315 lbs | 395 lbs |
| 198 lbs (90 kg) | 140 lbs | 210 lbs | 265 lbs | 340 lbs | 425 lbs |
| 220 lbs (100 kg) | 155 lbs | 225 lbs | 285 lbs | 365 lbs | 455 lbs |
| 242 lbs (110 kg) | 165 lbs | 240 lbs | 305 lbs | 385 lbs | 480 lbs |
| Body Weight | Beginner | Novice | Intermediate | Advanced | Elite |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 97 lbs (44 kg) | 40 lbs | 60 lbs | 80 lbs | 105 lbs | 135 lbs |
| 114 lbs (52 kg) | 50 lbs | 70 lbs | 95 lbs | 125 lbs | 155 lbs |
| 132 lbs (60 kg) | 55 lbs | 80 lbs | 110 lbs | 145 lbs | 180 lbs |
| 148 lbs (67 kg) | 65 lbs | 95 lbs | 125 lbs | 160 lbs | 200 lbs |
| 165 lbs (75 kg) | 70 lbs | 105 lbs | 140 lbs | 175 lbs | 220 lbs |
| 181 lbs (82 kg) | 75 lbs | 115 lbs | 150 lbs | 190 lbs | 240 lbs |
| 198 lbs (90 kg) | 80 lbs | 120 lbs | 160 lbs | 205 lbs | 255 lbs |
| Age Range | Strength Factor | Peak Performance | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 14–17 | 0.80–0.90 | Developing | Focus on form, not max load |
| 18–22 | 0.93–0.98 | Near Peak | Rapid strength gains possible |
| 23–35 | 1.00 | Prime Years | Peak absolute strength window |
| 36–45 | 0.94–0.98 | Slight Decline | Recovery becomes more important |
| 46–55 | 0.86–0.93 | Moderate Decline | Prioritize technique & volume |
| 56–65 | 0.78–0.85 | Gradual Decline | Joint health becomes priority |
| 66+ | 0.65–0.77 | Senior Level | Consistent training maintains gains |
| Level | Male Ratio (1RM/BW) | Female Ratio (1RM/BW) | Example (175 lb male) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beginner | 0.50 – 0.75x | 0.30 – 0.50x | 88 – 131 lbs |
| Novice | 0.75 – 1.00x | 0.50 – 0.65x | 131 – 175 lbs |
| Intermediate | 1.00 – 1.25x | 0.65 – 0.80x | 175 – 219 lbs |
| Advanced | 1.25 – 1.75x | 0.80 – 1.00x | 219 – 306 lbs |
| Elite | 1.75x+ | 1.00x+ | 306+ lbs |
| % of 1RM | Approx Reps | Training Goal | Rest Between Sets |
|---|---|---|---|
| 95–100% | 1 | Max Strength Test | 3–5 min |
| 90–95% | 2–3 | Maximum Strength | 3–5 min |
| 85–90% | 4–5 | Strength | 2–4 min |
| 75–85% | 6–8 | Strength-Hypertrophy | 2–3 min |
| 67–75% | 9–12 | Hypertrophy | 60–90 sec |
| 57–67% | 13–18 | Muscular Endurance | 45–60 sec |
| 50–57% | 19–25 | Endurance | 30–45 sec |
The bench press is an exercise for training weight, in that one presses the weight upward, while one lies on a bench. One lowers the weight until the level of the chest and later pushes it upward while one extends the arms. For this move one can use a barbell or pair of dumbbells.
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That exercise is compound, so it works several muscles at once. Main muscles, that it involves, are the pectorals, the front deltoids and the triceps. Also the core gets work.
How to Do the Bench Press
The bench press ranks among the most effective exercises for building muscles and strength in the upper body. Although it mainly targets the chest, the shoulders and triceps benefit from the training also. Big focus on good form helps to avoid injuries even if the move seems easy.
There are various kinds of bench press, that target the chest and nearby muscles a bit differently. For the usual bench press the flat bench works well. For incline or decline bench press you need an adjustable bench.
The incline press works the upper parts of the chest muscles. Usually one must use more lightweight barbells for the incline bench press than for that on flat bench. If one combines different moves, like the incline barbell bench press and the decline dumbbell bench press, one can reach the chest from various directions.
Before removing the barbell, the setup is key. One must squeeze the shoulder blades and keep the back tight. Use the feet to push yourself against the bench, when you push upward.
Do not let the back and chest loosen at the bottom of the move. It is good too take a deep breath and use it to tighten the belly wall, while lowering the barbell. Think about bending the barbell in U-form, which helps to keep the elbows natural, use the broad back muscles and protect the shoulders.
Hold the breath until passing the hardest part of the press, then breathe out while you push.
For the position of the feet, narrower stance and pushing into the bench with the legs increases the stability. Turning the toes a bit out also helps with the side balance.
Failing halfway during reps commonly points to weak deltoids. Failing at the spot of the chest shows weak pectorals or broad back muscles. The dumbbell bench press and heavier versions can help fix that.
The close bench press and moves like skull-crushers and JM-presses also help the main bench press. Train the form three times weekly with various numbers of reps and high effort, which improves the lift. Controlled reps with good form give better results than fast lifting of heavy weight.
If there is no spotter, the dumbbell or barbell floor press is a good replacement, although usually one can raise lessweight with dumbbells, because they are less stable.
