strength standards

Strength Standards: Are You Beginner or Elite?

Understand what beginner, novice, intermediate, advanced, and elite really mean across the main barbell lifts.

9 min read2026-03-23

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Strength Standards

Compare your lifts against bodyweight classes for six core exercises.

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Why labels help when they are used correctly

Strength labels are only useful when they create direction. If a standard helps you set the next target, it is valuable. If it only makes you compare yourself to someone with different training history, it is noise.

A good standards model adjusts for bodyweight and lift selection. Bench, squat, deadlift, overhead press, rows, and pull-ups do not progress at the same rate.

What the five levels usually mean

Beginner lifters are still learning technique and accumulating easy adaptations. Novice lifters can progress on simple weekly structure. Intermediate lifters need more deliberate fatigue management. Advanced lifters need well-planned cycles. Elite lifters are competing near the top of their context.

Those are coaching categories first. The numbers should support the coaching category rather than replace it.

LevelTypical descriptionProgramming implication
BeginnerTechnique is inconsistent and numbers move easily.Use simple progression and repeat the main lifts often.
NoviceWeekly progression still works in many lifts.Use basic overload with moderate volume.
IntermediateProgress depends on fatigue management.Alternate heavier and lighter exposures across the week.
AdvancedProgress arrives in planned blocks.Use variation, peaking logic, and tighter recovery control.
ElitePerformance sits near the top of the field.Train with highly specific cycles and lower error tolerance.

Why bodyweight classes make standards more honest

Absolute load always favors bigger lifters. Relative strength often favors lighter lifters. The standards page balances both by comparing you against the right class before assigning a level.

This is the difference between useful benchmarking and random leaderboard obsession.

How to program from a standards gap

If your squat is advanced but your bench is novice, your program does not need more squat volume. It needs more bench-specific intent. Standards reveal asymmetry fast.

Use them quarterly. They are not a daily emotional weather report.

Calculator

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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

Bench Press is currently in the Advanced range. You are stronger than about 91% of comparable lifter profiles.

Next target

+3.5 kg to Elite

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

Bench Press 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.

How strong is elite?

Elite usually represents the top tier of recreational or competitive performance within a bodyweight class, not simply anyone stronger than average.

Can I be advanced in one lift and novice in another?

Yes. Most lifters are uneven, which is exactly why per-lift standards are useful.

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