Squat
Back Squat
Use your most honest full-depth squat max or estimate as the anchor for lower-body volume and top-set work.
Estimated 1RM
160.0 kg
Exact TM
144.0 kg
90% of current 1RM.
Practical TM
145.0 kg
Next cycle preview: 149.0 kg
Training Max Calculator
Build four lift-specific training maxes, generate the full 5/3/1 loading wave, preview your next cycle, and keep a local TM history without leaving the page.
TM Percentage
Move between 85% and 95% to make the plan more conservative or more aggressive. 90% stays the default.
Estimator
Uses Epley, Brzycki, and Lander together.
Squat
Use your most honest full-depth squat max or estimate as the anchor for lower-body volume and top-set work.
Estimated 1RM
160.0 kg
Exact TM
144.0 kg
90% of current 1RM.
Practical TM
145.0 kg
Next cycle preview: 149.0 kg
Deadlift
Keep the deadlift training max conservative enough that the main work stays crisp and recoverable.
Estimated 1RM
190.0 kg
Exact TM
171.0 kg
90% of current 1RM.
Practical TM
170.0 kg
Next cycle preview: 176.0 kg
Bench
Bench responds well to precise TM planning because pressing fatigue can hide quickly behind missed top sets.
Estimated 1RM
110.0 kg
Exact TM
99.0 kg
90% of current 1RM.
Practical TM
100.0 kg
Next cycle preview: 101.5 kg
Press
Press TM should stay especially honest because small loading errors show up faster on strict overhead work.
Estimated 1RM
70.0 kg
Exact TM
63.0 kg
90% of current 1RM.
Practical TM
62.5 kg
Next cycle preview: 65.5 kg
Every week below is based on your current TM percentage setting. All working weights are rounded to the nearest 2.5 kg.
Week 1
| Lift | Set 1 | Set 2 | Set 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Squat | 92.5 kg 65% x 5 Round -1.1 kg | 107.5 kg 75% x 5 Round -0.5 kg | 122.5 kg 85% x 5+ AMRAP Round +0.1 kg |
| Deadlift | 110.0 kg 65% x 5 Round -1.2 kg | 127.5 kg 75% x 5 Round -0.8 kg | 145.0 kg 85% x 5+ AMRAP Round -0.3 kg |
| Bench | 65.0 kg 65% x 5 Round +0.6 kg | 75.0 kg 75% x 5 Round +0.8 kg | 85.0 kg 85% x 5+ AMRAP Round +0.9 kg |
| Press | 40.0 kg 65% x 5 Round -1.0 kg | 47.5 kg 75% x 5 Round +0.3 kg | 52.5 kg 85% x 5+ AMRAP Round -1.0 kg |
Week 2
| Lift | Set 1 | Set 2 | Set 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Squat | 100.0 kg 70% x 3 Round -0.8 kg | 115.0 kg 80% x 3 Round -0.2 kg | 130.0 kg 90% x 3+ AMRAP Round +0.4 kg |
| Deadlift | 120.0 kg 70% x 3 Round +0.3 kg | 137.5 kg 80% x 3 Round +0.7 kg | 155.0 kg 90% x 3+ AMRAP Round +1.1 kg |
| Bench | 70.0 kg 70% x 3 Round +0.7 kg | 80.0 kg 80% x 3 Round +0.8 kg | 90.0 kg 90% x 3+ AMRAP Round +0.9 kg |
| Press | 45.0 kg 70% x 3 Round +0.9 kg | 50.0 kg 80% x 3 Round -0.4 kg | 57.5 kg 90% x 3+ AMRAP Round +0.8 kg |
Week 3
| Lift | Set 1 | Set 2 | Set 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Squat | 107.5 kg 75% x 5 Round -0.5 kg | 122.5 kg 85% x 3 Round +0.1 kg | 137.5 kg 95% x 1+ AMRAP Round +0.7 kg |
| Deadlift | 127.5 kg 75% x 5 Round -0.8 kg | 145.0 kg 85% x 3 Round -0.3 kg | 162.5 kg 95% x 1+ AMRAP Round +0.1 kg |
| Bench | 75.0 kg 75% x 5 Round +0.8 kg | 85.0 kg 85% x 3 Round +0.9 kg | 95.0 kg 95% x 1+ AMRAP Round +1.0 kg |
| Press | 47.5 kg 75% x 5 Round +0.3 kg | 52.5 kg 85% x 3 Round -1.0 kg | 60.0 kg 95% x 1+ AMRAP Round +0.2 kg |
Week 4
| Lift | Set 1 | Set 2 | Set 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Squat | 57.5 kg 40% x 5 Round -0.1 kg | 72.5 kg 50% x 5 Round +0.5 kg | 87.5 kg 60% x 5 Round +1.1 kg |
| Deadlift | 67.5 kg 40% x 5 Round -0.9 kg | 85.0 kg 50% x 5 Round -0.5 kg | 102.5 kg 60% x 5 Round -0.1 kg |
| Bench | 40.0 kg 40% x 5 Round +0.4 kg | 50.0 kg 50% x 5 Round +0.5 kg | 60.0 kg 60% x 5 Round +0.6 kg |
| Press | 25.0 kg 40% x 5 Round -0.2 kg | 32.5 kg 50% x 5 Round +1.0 kg | 37.5 kg 60% x 5 Round -0.3 kg |
After a completed cycle, many lifters bump upper-body TMs by 2.5 kg and lower-body TMs by 5 kg. Override those numbers above if your cycle ran too hard or too easy.
Squat
144.0 kg → 149.0 kg
Suggested increase: 5 kg
Deadlift
171.0 kg → 176.0 kg
Suggested increase: 5 kg
Bench
99.0 kg → 101.5 kg
Suggested increase: 2.5 kg
Press
63.0 kg → 65.5 kg
Suggested increase: 2.5 kg
These accessory anchors use your current TM values so common assistance work can be loaded without new spreadsheets.
Incline Press
80.0 kg
A useful upper-pec and front-delt accessory anchor from your bench TM.
Bench TM × 82%
Close-Grip Bench
90.0 kg
Usually sits close enough to bench TM to make triceps work easy to plan.
Bench TM × 90%
Front Squat
122.5 kg
A practical front-squat reference for quad and upright-position volume.
Squat TM × 85%
Stiff-Leg Deadlift
127.5 kg
A conservative hinge accessory anchor that keeps hamstring work heavy without turning into a max pull.
Deadlift TM × 75%
Save each completed cycle to see how your training maxes are moving over time across all four lifts.
History is stored locally in your browser only. Save each cycle snapshot when you finish a block or change the TM percentage intentionally.
A training max, usually shortened to TM, is a deliberately conservative percentage of your real one-rep max. Instead of programming every week from the heaviest weight you might be able to hit on your best day, you program from a lower anchor that is easier to repeat under normal fatigue, normal sleep, and normal life stress. That is why a training max calculator matters. It turns an impressive but volatile top number into a number you can actually build a month of productive training around.
This distinction matters because true 1RM and useful programming load are not the same thing. A tested max reflects absolute ability in a narrow moment. A training max reflects what you should use to manage weekly exposure. If your best bench press is 140 kg but that number only shows up under perfect circumstances, then loading every volume week from 140 is a fast way to miss reps and accumulate junk fatigue. A smarter approach is to reduce the base, then let percentages do the work.
The most common version of this idea comes from Jim Wendler's 5/3/1 system, where most lifters set TM at 90 percent of their true or estimated max. That does not mean the program is easy. It means the program is sustainable. The working sets can stay crisp, the final set can still be pushed when appropriate, and the next cycle has room to progress without immediately running into a wall. This page is designed around that logic by helping you build TMs for squat, deadlift, bench press, and overhead press at the same time.
A good training max calculator should therefore do more than apply a 90 percent multiplier. It should let you start from either a real 1RM or a recent rep set, show the exact TM and the practical rounded TM, generate the full four-week 5/3/1 wave, preview the next cycle increase, and save the numbers so you can see whether the plan is actually moving over time. That is the difference between a one-line formula and a usable programming tool.
The classic 90 percent training max works because it builds error tolerance into the plan. Estimated maxes are never perfect, daily readiness is never identical, and most lifters are not peaking year-round. A conservative anchor absorbs those realities. If your estimated squat max is slightly inflated, the 90 percent rule protects you. If your max is accurate but you are carrying fatigue from work, poor sleep, or a hard previous session, the lower anchor protects you there too.
This is especially useful when you estimate 1RM from rep work instead of testing a single. Formulas such as Epley, Brzycki, and Lander are practical, but they still model a max from a non-max effort. That means the input is only as good as the set, the rep quality, and the rep range. Using 90 percent of the estimate acknowledges that uncertainty without making the program so light that it stops driving adaptation.
Another reason 90 percent works is that it improves weekly bar speed and repeatability. The 5/3/1 percentages are meant to produce strong reps, not constant grinders. Week 1 at 65, 75, and 85 percent of TM should feel like quality work. Week 2 should build intensity without collapsing technique. Week 3 should be the heaviest exposure, and even then the final set only works if the earlier weeks did not bury you. A realistic TM is what makes that progression possible.
None of this means 90 percent is mandatory forever. Smaller lifters, older lifters, or athletes coming back from layoffs may benefit from 85 to 88 percent. Highly stable advanced lifters sometimes run 92 to 95 percent for short periods. That is why this page keeps the TM percentage adjustable from 85 to 95. The default is still 90 because it remains the best starting point for most lifters who care more about progress than about pretending every week is a max-out week.
The calculator above is built to handle the four main lifts inside one workflow. For each lift, you can either enter a direct one-rep max or switch to a weight-by-reps input and let the tool estimate 1RM first. That matters because many lifters know their squat and deadlift maxes but prefer to estimate bench or press from recent rep work. The page lets you mix those approaches without breaking the cycle output.
The CSV export and print buttons are there because TM planning tends to leave the browser and enter the gym. If you coach multiple athletes or prefer a paper printout on training day, export the cycle and keep the rounded weights. If you run cycles over several months, save a snapshot at the end of each block so the history chart can show whether your bench, squat, deadlift, and press are all progressing at the same rate.
One subtle but important detail is that the accessory references also pull from TM rather than from true 1RM. That keeps assistance work anchored to the same planning philosophy. The point of accessory loading is not to chase inflated numbers there either. It is to build muscle and technical reinforcement that support the next main-lift cycle.
A training max should usually increase after a completed cycle, not after a single good workout. That distinction is what keeps a useful system from turning into random day-to-day load chasing. In the classic 5/3/1 approach, lower-body lifts move up by 5 kg and upper-body lifts move up by 2.5 kg after the four-week wave. In pounds, the practical equivalents are 10 lb for squat and deadlift and 5 lb for bench press and overhead press.
Those jumps are deliberately small. The goal is not to prove that you got dramatically stronger in four weeks. The goal is to stack many modest increases without breaking the quality of the work. Training max progression is compounding. A lifter who adds manageable weight for a year usually beats the lifter who jumps too aggressively, misses reps, and resets every other cycle.
If every AMRAP set flew, rep quality stayed high, and recovery was never challenged, a slightly larger increase can make sense. That is why the calculator lets you override the default upper and lower increments. But faster increases should still be justified by repeated evidence across the whole block, not by one adrenaline-heavy top set.
If your final sets slowed dramatically, rep targets were missed, or technique deteriorated across several weeks, that is usually a sign the current TM is already aggressive enough. Holding the number steady or even reducing it slightly is often a smarter move than forcing the increase because the calendar says so. Better cycles come from honest anchors, not from stubborn ones.
The history chart on this page is useful because it turns a series of training maxes into a visible trend. A single slow week can be noise. Six months of flat bench TMs next to steadily rising squat and deadlift TMs is a real programming signal. Save each block, then evaluate the slope instead of the emotion of one training day.
Many lifters understand how to use TM for the main lift but then guess at accessory loading. That creates a mismatch. Main work becomes systematic while assistance work drifts wherever motivation happens to land. The accessory panel on this page fixes that by calculating practical reference weights for incline press, close-grip bench, front squat, and stiff-leg deadlift from the relevant lift-specific training maxes.
This does not mean every accessory should be run with strict percentage-based precision all year. Assistance work still needs room for exercise selection, fatigue management, and hypertrophy-focused execution. But using TM-based anchors gives you a reliable starting point. If your bench TM rises, the reference loads for incline and close-grip work rise with it. If your squat TM stalls, the front squat anchor exposes that stall immediately.
The bigger principle is consistency. When the same conservative logic drives your main work, your accessory work, and your cycle increases, the whole program becomes easier to recover from and easier to compare over time. That is especially valuable for intermediate lifters who no longer progress from random hard work alone. They need loading decisions that line up from top to bottom.
The most common TM mistake is treating it like a hidden true max. It is not. True 1RM is your current top-end ability. Training max is a planning anchor. If those two numbers collapse into one, then the whole benefit of conservative programming disappears. You are back to writing every week from the hardest thing you might be able to do, which is exactly what most lifters should avoid outside a peak.
Think of true 1RM as a performance number and training max as a management number. The performance number tells you how strong you are right now. The management number tells you how to organize the next block so that strength can keep growing. Good programs need both, but they should not confuse them. One is for testing. The other is for repeating.
That is also why a training max calculator pairs so naturally with a one-rep max calculator. First estimate the real ceiling honestly. Then reduce it into a number that can survive real-life training conditions. The lifter who respects that separation usually ends up stronger in the long run than the lifter who insists on making every week prove something.
These answers match the FAQ schema on the page so search engines and users see the same wording.
A training max is a conservative loading anchor used to build a repeatable program. Instead of using your absolute best 1RM, you usually take about 90% of it so weekly work stays productive.
Using roughly 90% of a true or estimated 1RM keeps day-to-day percentages realistic. That reduces missed reps, limits fatigue spikes, and gives you room to progress cycle after cycle.
Either can work. If you do not have a recent tested max, estimating 1RM from a hard set of 3–6 reps is usually more than good enough for setting a training max.
In 5/3/1, each week uses percentages of your training max, not percentages of your true 1RM. That is why the first week uses 65%, 75%, and 85% of TM instead of the true max itself.
After a full four-week cycle, many lifters add 2.5 kg to upper-body lifts and 5 kg to lower-body lifts. In pounds, practical equivalents are 5 lb for upper body and 10 lb for lower body.
Programming Guides
Use cleaner input data and understand formula behavior before you anchor a whole cycle to one estimate.
See why Epley, Brzycki, and Lander can diverge and how conservative estimates protect programming quality.
Use standards as a coaching benchmark so your TM reflects current ability instead of ego lifting.
Related Calculators
Estimate the max, compare it against standards, and then load the next phase with numbers you can actually repeat.
Core
Estimate a realistic one-rep max first, then convert it into a conservative training max for week-to-week loading.
Lower Body
Turn your squat work sets into a 1RM estimate, standards check, and progression-ready training plan.
Hip Hinge
Model your deadlift max, intensity zones, and next block before feeding the result into a 5/3/1 cycle.
Benchmarks
Compare each lift against bodyweight-based standards so your training max stays honest.