bench press standards by weight

What Is a Good Bench Press for My Weight?

Use bodyweight-based benchmarks to see whether your bench press is beginner, intermediate, advanced, or elite.

8 min read2026-03-23

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Bench Press Calculator

Benchmark your bench press strength level, percentile, and training loads.

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Why bodyweight changes the answer

A 100 kg bench press means different things at 60 kg bodyweight and at 110 kg bodyweight. That is why serious strength comparisons always include bodyweight, sex category, and the lift itself.

Good standards use relative strength first and absolute load second. Your bodyweight tells you how much muscle mass and leverage you can reasonably bring to the movement, while your actual bench number shows how efficiently you turn that into force.

A practical benchmark ladder

Most lifters improve fastest when they think in ladders instead of labels. The benchmark below is the useful version: beginner means you are building a technical base, intermediate means you can produce repeatable strength, and advanced means your progress now needs real planning.

  • Beginner: below bodyweight for most men, around half bodyweight for most women.
  • Novice: roughly 0.7x bodyweight for men, 0.38x for women.
  • Intermediate: around 0.95x bodyweight for men, 0.55x for women.
  • Advanced: roughly 1.2x bodyweight for men, 0.72x for women.
  • Elite: around 1.5x bodyweight for men, 0.9x for women.
LevelMenWomenMeaning
Beginner<1.0x bodyweight<0.5x bodyweightLearning setup, pause control, and leg drive.
Novice0.7x bodyweight0.38x bodyweightConsistent weekly progress is still available.
Intermediate0.95x bodyweight0.55x bodyweightPressing strength is repeatable and program-sensitive.
Advanced1.2x bodyweight0.72x bodyweightPlateaus now need more precise volume and recovery.
Elite1.5x bodyweight0.9x bodyweightTop-tier recreational or competitive pressing.

These are practical modeled guideposts, not meet-standard adjudication.

What actually improves your bench press

Bench strength grows from better positioning, higher-quality volume, and more triceps and upper-back strength. Lifters stall when they chase heavy singles too early and skip the rep work that builds the pressing base.

If your bench is lagging, look at bar path consistency, leg drive, pause control, and weekly exposure before blaming genetics.

  • Train bench press or a close variation two to three times per week.
  • Keep one higher-volume day and one higher-intensity day.
  • Build triceps with close-grip bench, dips, and skull crushers.
  • Build stability with rows, pull-ups, and upper-back isometrics.

Use the calculator the right way

If you do not have a true one-rep max, use a recent set of three to eight reps. That gives the calculator enough signal without forcing a risky max attempt.

Then compare your estimated max against your bodyweight class and current training age. The more useful question is not whether you are strong in the abstract. It is whether your next milestone is clear.

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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.

Is benching bodyweight good?

For many general lifters, a bodyweight bench is a solid intermediate milestone, though the exact standard depends on sex, bodyweight, and training background.

How often should I test my bench max?

Most lifters only need to test every 8 to 12 weeks. Estimate with rep work in between so training quality stays high.

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