deadlift strength standards

How Much Should I Be Able to Deadlift?

Use bodyweight-based deadlift standards to see what counts as novice, intermediate, advanced, and elite pulling strength.

8 min read2026-03-24

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Deadlift Calculator

See your deadlift max, intensity zones, and level progression instantly.

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Start with the right question

The useful deadlift question is not whether a number looks big in isolation. It is whether that number is strong for your bodyweight, sex category, and training age.

Deadlift standards matter because pulling strength scales fast with size, leverages, and technique. A single benchmark without context is mostly noise.

Practical deadlift milestones

For many male lifters, 1.05x bodyweight is a novice-level deadlift, 1.4x bodyweight is intermediate, and 1.72x bodyweight is advanced. For many female lifters, the practical ladder is around 0.8x, 1.08x, and 1.34x bodyweight.

Those ratios are useful because they show whether your deadlift is keeping pace with the rest of your profile.

LevelMenWomenInterpretation
Novice1.05x bodyweight0.8x bodyweightYou can produce a stable base pull with decent setup.
Intermediate1.4x bodyweight1.08x bodyweightYour deadlift is now a real strength asset.
Advanced1.72x bodyweight1.34x bodyweightProgress depends more on programming and recovery.
Elite2.05x bodyweight1.6x bodyweightTop-end pulling strength relative to class.

These are modeled practical guideposts for general lifters and raw-strength benchmarking.

Why deadlift progress stalls

Most deadlift stalls come from weak positions at the floor, poor bracing, or overdoing heavy exposures. Many lifters treat every pull like a max attempt and never accumulate enough technically clean volume to improve.

If the bar breaks from the floor slowly, fix setup and quad drive. If it dies at the knee, improve lat tension, back strength, and patience through the mid-range.

How to move up a tier

Use a training max, keep one heavy deadlift exposure each week, and accumulate accessory volume without frying your lower back. Romanian deadlifts, paused deadlifts, rows, and trunk work usually carry over better than endlessly maxing out.

The fastest path is usually cleaner setup, more repeatable submaximal work, and fewer wasted grinders.

Calculator

Inline calculator

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

BeginnerNoviceIntermediateAdvancedElite

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.

Is deadlifting 180 kg good?

It depends on your bodyweight, sex category, and training age. For some lifters it is intermediate, and for others it is already advanced.

How often should I deadlift to get stronger?

Many lifters progress well with one heavier deadlift day plus one lighter variation day each week, provided fatigue stays controlled.

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