One-Rep Max Calculator: 6 Science-Based Strength Tools
Multi-formula 1RM estimation · NSCA strength standards · Wilks & IPF GL points · NSCA training load · RPE/RIR e1RM · SBD balance
The Six 1RM Prediction Formulas
One-repetition maximum (1RM) — the most weight you can lift for a single complete repetition — is the foundational measurement for strength programming. Direct 1RM testing carries injury risk, particularly for beginners and in fatigued states. Prediction equations allow safe, frequent estimates from submaximal sets.
Six equations have been validated in peer-reviewed research and are in common use by the NSCA, strength coaches, and sports scientists:
| Formula | Equation | Best Rep Range |
|---|---|---|
| Epley (1985) | w × (1 + r/30) | 1–10 |
| Brzycki (1993) | w / (1.0278 − 0.0278r) | 1–10 |
| Lander (1985) | (100w) / (101.3 − 2.67r) | 1–10 |
| Mayhew (1992) | (100w) / (52.2 + 41.9e^(−0.055r)) | 1–20 |
| O'Conner (1989) | w × (1 + 0.025r) | 1–10 |
| Wathen/NSCA (1994) | (100w) / (48.8 + 53.8e^(−0.075r)) | 1–10 |
Our calculator computes all six simultaneously and reports a consensus median — the median of the six estimates, which reduces the influence of any single formula's individual biases. The spread between the maximum and minimum formula estimates reflects prediction confidence: tighter spread means higher confidence.
The Brzycki formula approaches division by zero at 37 reps and becomes unreliable above 10. For sets above 10 reps, Mayhew and Wathen are more reliable choices.
NSCA Strength Standards (Baechle & Earle 2008)
The National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA) publishes normative strength standards that classify individuals as Untrained, Novice, Intermediate, Advanced, or Elite based on their 1RM relative to bodyweight. These norms are stratified by sex and age group, with age-related multipliers reflecting the natural decline in peak strength beginning in the fourth decade.
The NSCA standards use bodyweight-relative ratios rather than absolute weights, making them applicable across the full spectrum of body sizes. For example, an intermediate male squatter should achieve 1.50× bodyweight, while an advanced female bench presser should reach 0.90× bodyweight.
Age multipliers from the NSCA normative data are: 20–29 (reference), 30–39 (−5%), 40–49 (−12%), 50–59 (−20%), 60+ (−28%). These reflect neuromuscular and hormonal changes that reduce maximal strength expression in older adults.
Wilks Score & IPF GL Points
Comparing lifters across weight classes requires a body-weight–adjusted scoring system. The Wilks coefficient(Wilks 1998) uses a 5th-degree polynomial regression to normalise total lifted weight to bodyweight and sex:
Wilks = 500 / (a + b·BW + c·BW² + d·BW³ + e·BW⁴ + f·BW⁵)
Wilks points = coefficient × lifted weight. A score of 300+ indicates a serious club competitor; 400+ is state/regional level; 500+ is national contender; 600+ is world-class. Wilks was the standard scoring system in IPF-affiliated powerlifting competition from 1998 to 2019.
In 2019, the IPF Good Lift (GL) formula (Taber et al. 2020) replaced Wilks for IPF competition. IPF GL uses an exponential model calibrated on actual competition data, providing better calibration at extreme ends of the bodyweight spectrum where Wilks historically over- or under-rewarded competitors:
IPF GL = 100 × lifted / (A − B × e^(−C × bodyweight))
Parameters A, B, C vary by sex and equipment (classic/raw vs. equipped). An IPF GL score of 85+ indicates regional-level competition performance; 100+ is national contender level.
Training Load Planning (NSCA/ACSM)
Programming strength training with specific percentages of 1RM is the cornerstone of evidence-based periodisation. NSCA 2016 guidelines and ACSM position statements define distinct training zones, each targeting specific physiological adaptations:
| Zone | % 1RM | Reps | Sets | Primary Adaptation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maximal Strength | 85–100% | 1–5 | 3–5 | Neural recruitment |
| Power | 75–90% | 1–5 | 3–5 | Rate of force development |
| Hypertrophy | 65–85% | 6–12 | 3–4 | Myofibrillar hypertrophy |
| Endurance | 50–70% | 12–20 | 2–3 | Oxidative capacity |
The Training Load Planner adjusts recommended weights by a small experience multiplier: beginners use 90% of the zone weights to account for technique limitations; advanced lifters can use 105% of the standard loads. Re-test 1RM every 8–12 weeks to recalibrate zone weights as strength improves.
RPE / RIR-Based 1RM Estimation
The traditional Epley equation assumes reps were taken to absolute failure. In practice, most training sets stop short of failure. The Helms (2016) RPE-based formula incorporates Reps In Reserve (RIR):
e1RM = weight × (1 + (reps + RIR) / 30)
RIR = 10 − RPE
On the modified RPE scale (Zourdos 2016): RPE 10 = true max, no reps left; RPE 9 = 1 rep left; RPE 8 = 2 reps left; RPE 7 = 3 reps left; and so on. This scale was validated in competitive powerlifters and correlates strongly with bar velocity data from linear position transducers.
RPE-based autoregulation is now standard in evidence-based powerlifting programming. Daily fluctuations in readiness (sleep, stress, nutrition) can shift performance by 5–10%, making rigid percentage-based loads suboptimal on hard days. Training at RPE 7–8.5 (2–3 reps in reserve) balances sufficient stimulus with manageable fatigue, as validated by Zourdos et al. (2016).
Relative Strength & SBD Balance
Absolute 1RM values are useful within an individual's training history, but relative strength(1RM divided by bodyweight) enables cross-comparison and reveals training imbalances. The three primary powerlifting movements — squat (S), bench press (B), and deadlift (D) — should maintain approximate balance ratios derived from competitive powerlifting population norms:
- Bench:Squat ratio — target approximately 0.67 (bench ≈ 2/3 of squat)
- Deadlift:Squat ratio — target approximately 1.20 (deadlift ≈ 1.2× squat)
- SBD Total/BW — classification from Recreational to Elite
Deviations of >15% from target ratios suggest a relative weakness. A lagging bench press relative to squat indicates insufficient horizontal pressing volume or technique limitations. A lagging deadlift relative to squat suggests posterior chain weakness (glutes, hamstrings, lower back).
When a lift lags significantly, increasing its training frequency to 2 sessions per week while maintaining other lifts at 1 session typically produces catching-up within 8–12 weeks. Track ratio changes across training blocks to verify balance is being restored.
Accuracy & Practical Limitations
All 1RM prediction formulas carry inherent assumptions: they assume the relationship between rep count and muscular fatigue follows a predictable curve for all individuals. In reality, individual rep-max profiles vary significantly. Some lifters are "strength-biased" — their single-rep max far exceeds predictions from sets of 8+. Others are "endurance-biased" — their high-rep performance outpaces predictions.
Accuracy guidelines from the literature: using 1–5 rep sets yields ±3–5% error for most lifters. Sets of 6–10 reps yield ±5–8%. Sets above 10 reps: ±8–15%. For programming purposes, a 5% conservative adjustment below the estimated 1RM is recommended when setting training loads for beginners.
The NSCA (Baechle & Earle 2008) recommends re-estimating 1RM every 6–8 weeks for intermediate lifters and every 10–16 weeks for advanced lifters. Using a planned top set of 3–5 reps near maximal effort is the most practical and safest method for routine 1RM estimation during training phases.