100%
Barbell Row
Primary: Lats, rhomboids, mid traps
Best for: General back strength base
Bent-Over Row 1RM Calculator
Find your bent-over row 1RM, check your row-to-bench ratio, and build the back that makes every press safer and stronger.
Live row max
Estimated 1RM
Training Max: 84.0 kg (90% of 1RM)
Push-Pull Balance Check
Check Your Push-Pull Balance
Your Row 1RM: 93.3 kg
A row-to-bench ratio close to 1:1 is associated with lower shoulder injury risk in pressing athletes. Enter your bench to see where you stand, or estimate it with the bench press calculator.
Research note: upper-body pushing musculature is often stronger than pulling in untrained individuals. Trained athletes who prioritize balance tend to close this gap significantly. A 1:1 row-to-bench ratio is a practical target for pressing athletes.
Barbell Row Variations — Strength Comparison
Different row variations reward different strengths. Use one main reference lift, then use the others to attack weak points.
100%
Primary: Lats, rhomboids, mid traps
Best for: General back strength base
90–95%
Primary: Lats, traps, posterior chain
Best for: Explosive power and clean prep
~100%
Primary: Upper back, rear delts
Best for: Isolating upper-back weakness
~105%
Primary: Lats, biceps, mid back
Best for: Volume and feel on back days
Unilateral
Primary: Lats, rhomboids, core stability
Best for: Correcting left/right imbalances
Barbell Row Strength Standards by Bodyweight
Based on standard bent-over barbell row, overhand grip, touch-and-go style. Values represent estimated 1RM.
| Bodyweight | Beginner | Novice | Intermediate | Advanced | Elite |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 60 kg | 32.0 | 48.0 | 67.0 | 89.0 | 114.0 |
| 70 kg | 37.0 | 55.0 | 77.0 | 102.0 | 131.0 |
| 80 kg | 42.0 | 62.0 | 86.0 | 114.0 | 147.0 |
| 90 kg | 46.0 | 68.0 | 95.0 | 126.0 | 162.0 |
| 100 kg | 50.0 | 74.0 | 103.0 | 137.0 | 176.0 |
| 110 kg | 54.0 | 80.0 | 111.0 | 147.0 | 189.0 |
| 120 kg+ | 58.0 | 85.0 | 118.0 | 157.0 | 201.0 |
Pendlay Row standards are approximately 5–10% lower than these values. Seal Row and T-Bar Row are roughly comparable to standard barbell row. Single-arm dumbbell rows are not directly comparable. See full strength standards for all lifts.
Barbell Row Training Zones Based on Your 1RM
The barbell row responds well across a wide rep range. Unlike the squat or deadlift, high-rep rows are highly effective for upper back hypertrophy without the systemic fatigue cost of heavy pulling.
Max Strength
85–100% of 1RM
79.3–93.3 kg
1–5 reps | Rest: 3–5 min
Goal: Maximum pulling force, neural drive
Hypertrophy
67–85% of 1RM
62.5–79.3 kg
6–12 reps | Rest: 60–90 sec
Goal: Upper back and lat size
Muscular Endurance
50–67% of 1RM
46.7–62.5 kg
12–20+ reps | Rest: 30–60 sec
Goal: Work capacity, postural endurance
Power / Speed
30–60% of 1RM
28.0–56.0 kg
3–5 explosive reps | Rest: 2–3 min
Goal: Rate of force development, clean prep
Row-specific note: most programs underprescribe row volume relative to pressing. If your bench press gets 4 sets per session, your rows should get at least 4 sets too — ideally more.
Want to turn this into a block? Use the training max calculator.
Barbell Row Warm-up Protocol
The barbell row requires a hip-hinged position under load. Include 2–3 minutes of hip hinge practice, cat-cow stretches, and band pull-aparts before loading the bar.
| Set | % of 1RM | Weight | Reps | Rest | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 40% | -- | 10 | 90 sec | Groove the hip hinge, feel the lats |
| 2 | 55% | -- | 6 | 2 min | Control the eccentric |
| 3 | 70% | -- | 4 | 2 min | Full setup and brace |
| 4 | 80% | -- | 2 | 3 min | Near-working weight |
| 5 | 90% | -- | 1 | 3 min | Final prep set |
| Target | 100% | -- | 1 | — | Your working set |
Lower back fatigue from deadlifts or squats earlier in the session will directly affect your row. If rows follow heavy posterior chain work, reduce warm-up sets and start at 60% instead of 40%.
Barbell Row Rep Max Table
Use this table to choose working loads for specific rep targets based on the selected formula result.
| Reps | % of 1RM | Weight | Training Zone |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 100% | 93.3 kg | Max Strength |
| 2 | 97% | 90.5 kg | Max Strength |
| 3 | 94% | 87.7 kg | Strength |
| 4 | 92% | 85.9 kg | Strength |
| 5 | 89% | 83.1 kg | Strength |
| 6 | 86% | 80.3 kg | Hypertrophy |
| 8 | 81% | 75.6 kg | Hypertrophy |
| 10 | 75% | 70.0 kg | Hypertrophy |
| 12 | 71% | 66.3 kg | Endurance |
| 15 | 67% | 62.5 kg | Endurance |
| 20 | 60% | 56.0 kg | Endurance |
The barbell row is one of the most important upper-body pulling lifts because it trains the muscles that oppose heavy pressing. In the standard bent over row, you hinge at the hips, brace the torso, hold the bar with an overhand grip, and pull the bar toward the lower ribs while keeping the back angle consistent. That simple setup makes the lift a direct test of back strength, grip, trunk control, and scapular coordination.
The main muscles are the lats, rhomboids, mid traps, rear delts, biceps, and spinal erectors. The lats pull the upper arm back, the rhomboids and traps retract the shoulder blades, and the trunk muscles keep the hip-hinged position from collapsing. This is why a row number is not just a bodybuilding metric. It tells you whether your upper back can stabilize the shoulder joint under heavy training.
The row is often described as the mirror of the bench press. Bench pressing pushes the shoulder blades into protraction and loads the front side of the shoulder. Rowing pulls the shoulder blades back into retraction and strengthens the muscles that keep pressing mechanics from drifting forward. A strong barbell row does not guarantee pain-free shoulders, but a badly lagging row is one of the easiest warning signs to spot.
Enter a recent hard set with clean technique: the load lifted and the reps completed. Sets of 3–8 reps usually give the best bent over row 1RM calculator result because they are heavy enough to reflect strength without turning the set into a grip-endurance test. The calculator defaults to Epley because it is a practical general formula, while Brzycki gives a more conservative estimate and Lander usually sits between the two.
Choose the row variation carefully. Standard Barbell Row is the reference lift for the standards table. Pendlay Row starts from a dead stop and usually comes in 5–10% lower. Seal Row removes lower-back and hip-drive compensation, while T-Bar Row changes grip and leverage. Single-arm dumbbell rows are useful, but they are not a clean substitute for bilateral barbell row standards.
Bodyweight unlocks the strength level and next target. Bench press 1RM unlocks the Row:Bench balance analyzer. If you do not know your bench number yet, estimate it with the bench press calculator first, then return to compare the two lifts on the same unit scale.
Barbell row strength standards need bodyweight context. A 100 kg row is a different performance for a 60 kg lifter than it is for a 110 kg lifter, especially because the hip hinge and trunk position become harder to maintain as absolute load rises. The table above uses bodyweight rows so the target is concrete instead of a vague label.
For men, an intermediate standard is roughly around bodyweight in many classes, while elite standards can approach 1.7–1.9× bodyweight. For women, intermediate barbell row standards commonly sit around 0.65× bodyweight, with advanced and elite levels rising from there. The exact number depends on the weight class, sex category, and whether the row is a strict bent-over row rather than a high-momentum cheat row.
Row progress can feel slower than bench press progress because the back is harder for many lifters to recruit cleanly. The lift also competes with grip strength and lower-back fatigue. Treat the standard as a direction, not a verdict: the real value is knowing the next threshold and whether your pulling strength is keeping pace with your pressing.
The row to bench press ratio is the diagnostic number that makes this page different from a simple max calculator. Pressing strength commonly outruns pulling strength, especially in lifters who train bench press hard but treat rows as optional accessories. Physio-oriented research and coaching practice both point to push-pull imbalance as a major contributor to shoulder irritation, impingement patterns, and poor scapular control.
A practical goal for pressing athletes is a Row:Bench ratio near 1:1. Below 0.70 is a warning sign: the back is not keeping up with the loads the pressing side can produce. The fastest fix is simple but not easy: match every pressing session with equal or greater horizontal pulling volume, then add a dedicated back day if the ratio refuses to move.
This is also where the overhead press calculator becomes useful. OHP:Bench tells you whether vertical pressing is balanced against horizontal pressing. Row:Bench tells you whether the pulling system can support both. Together they form a better shoulder-health snapshot than any single press number.
Standard Barbell Row is the best general reference because it combines upper-back strength, lat drive, hip-hinge control, and repeatable loading. Use it when you want a number that compares cleanly against bent over row standards by bodyweight. Pendlay Row is stricter in a different way: each rep starts dead-stop from the floor, so momentum and stretch reflex disappear. That makes it a great power and clean-prep tool, but most lifters will use 5–10% less weight.
Seal Row removes lower-back fatigue by supporting the chest on a bench. It is excellent when you want to isolate the upper back or keep rows in a program after heavy squats and deadlifts. T-Bar Row uses a neutral grip and often feels better on elbows while allowing high-volume back work. Neither should automatically replace the barbell row as your primary strength reference, but both are useful assistance lifts.
Pull-ups fill a different role: vertical pulling. If your horizontal pulling is strong but your vertical pulling lags, use the pull-up calculator to compare bodyweight reps, weighted pull-ups, and assisted pull-up progress.
The first reason is volume. Many programs accidentally create a 3:1 push-to-pull split by giving the bench press multiple hard exposures while rows are added as a few rushed sets at the end. If your ratio card shows a low score, start by matching pressing sets with rows and keeping the row work strict enough to count.
Rows performed after heavy deadlifts or squats often suffer because the lower back is already tired. That does not mean the back is weak; it means the position is compromised. Move rows earlier in the session, use chest-supported variations for volume, and train grip separately if the hands give out before the lats and upper back.
A row should feel like the elbows drive back and the shoulder blades move, not like the arms curl the weight up. Keep the torso angle consistent, pull toward a repeatable point, and avoid turning every rep into a hip extension. When the form is repeatable, the calculator result becomes useful. When the form changes every rep, the number is just noise. Use the ratio analyzer above to see if your row-to-bench ratio needs work.