1rm formula

The 5 Best Formulas to Estimate 1RM

Compare common 1RM formulas, understand what each one does well, and pick the right one for your training.

8 min read2026-03-23

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1RM Calculator

Estimate your one-rep max with Epley, Brzycki, and Lander formulas.

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Why formulas disagree

A formula is only a model of fatigue. Different models assume a different cost per rep, which is why the same 100 kg x 8 set does not always produce the same max estimate.

The right formula is usually the one that best matches how you personally perform on low-rep sets.

The formulas most lifters should care about

Epley, Brzycki, and Lander cover most practical needs. O'Conner and Lombardi are sometimes discussed, but the first three already give enough spread to understand likely max range.

  • Epley favors straightforward linear scaling.
  • Brzycki pulls estimates down slightly when reps climb.
  • Lander smooths between aggressive and conservative estimates.
  • Lombardi tends to reward high-rep endurance more heavily.
  • O'Conner is simple but less common in modern tools.
FormulaStyleBest use case
EpleyBalanced linear estimateGeneral 3-8 rep barbell work.
BrzyckiMore conservative curveLifters who overshoot from high reps.
LanderMiddle-ground polynomialProgramming a realistic max range.
LombardiPower-based scalingExploring upper-end estimates from rep work.
O'ConnerSimple heuristicQuick rough checks when precision is not the priority.

Formula choice depends on the lift

Bench press often estimates cleanly from moderate rep work. Squat and deadlift estimates get messier because technique and fatigue change more dramatically across rep ranges.

That is why coaches prefer to compare all three formulas rather than trust a single number blindly.

Use formulas as a range, not a verdict

The smart move is to use the formulas to create a reasonable operating range, then choose a training max that lets the program succeed. A slightly conservative estimate is better than a perfectly impressive spreadsheet.

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Run the numbers without leaving the article, then jump to the full tool for deeper breakdowns.

Formula

Training max

105.0kg

Use 90% of estimated 1RM to keep weekly loading productive instead of inflated.

Estimated 1RM

116.7kg

Conventional Deadlift is currently in the Intermediate range. You are stronger than about 59% of comparable lifter profiles.

Next target

+21.0 kg to Advanced

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Formula spread

Epley

Best fit for low-to-moderate rep sets and the default most lifters use.

116.7

kg

Brzycki

Slightly more conservative at higher reps and useful for coaching estimates.

112.5

kg

Lander

Smooths the curve between Epley and Brzycki for practical programming.

113.7

kg

Training split

Day 1

Competition skill

Conventional Deadlift with clean technique and moderate intensity.

82 kg x 5 x 4

Day 2

Volume

Use longer eccentrics or pauses if the weak point is positional.

73.5 kg x 6 x 4

Day 3

Speed + variation

Move every rep fast and stop the set if speed drops hard.

65 kg x 8 x 2

Day 4

Heavy doubles

Use this day to feel heavier load without turning it into a max-out.

89.5 kg x 5 x 2

FAQ

FAQ

Answers to the most common questions about the calculator and strength standards.

Which formula is most accurate?

There is no universally best formula. Epley is a common default, but the best choice depends on the lift, rep range, and how you fatigue.

Should formulas replace testing?

No. They are a practical substitute between test blocks, not a permanent replacement for actual performance.

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