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1 Rep Max Percentage Chart (Complete Guide)

Last updated: May 2026

A 1 rep max percentage chart converts your one-rep max into exact training loads for any set and rep scheme. Your 1RM is 100%. Every other weight you lift is a percentage of that number. Find your rep range, multiply your 1RM by the percentage, and you have your training load — no guessing.

Below you’ll find the standard percentage chart, training zone guidelines, Prilepin’s chart (the NSCA’s evidence-based volume framework), and strength standards for bench press and squat.

1 Rep Max Percentage Chart

This table shows the percentage of your 1RM you’re working at for any given rep count, along with the primary training adaptation for each zone.

Reps% of 1RMTraining Focus
1100%Maximal strength test
297%Maximal strength
394%Maximal strength
492%Strength
589%Strength
686%Strength
783%Strength–hypertrophy
881%Strength–hypertrophy
978%Hypertrophy
1075%Hypertrophy
1173%Hypertrophy
1271%Hypertrophy
1370%Hypertrophy
1468%Hypertrophy–endurance
1567%Muscular endurance
1665%Muscular endurance
1764%Muscular endurance
1863%Muscular endurance
1961%Muscular endurance
2060%Muscular endurance

Example: Your squat 1RM is 300 lb. Your program calls for 4 sets of 5. Look up 5 reps → 89% → 0.89 × 300 = 267 lb. Round to 265 lb.

To use this chart you need to know your 1RM. If you haven’t tested it, you can estimate it from any working set using the calculator below:

Find Your 1 Rep Max

Enter any set and rep count to estimate your 1RM instantly. Works for bench press, squat, deadlift, or any other lift.

Use the 1RM Calculator →

Training Zones by Percentage

The percentage chart becomes a programming tool once you understand what each zone produces:

% of 1RMRep RangePrimary GoalCommon Use
90–100%1–3Maximal strengthPowerlifting-style peaking
80–90%3–6Strength5/3/1, linear progression top sets
70–80%6–9Strength + hypertrophyMost intermediate programs
60–70%10–15HypertrophyClassic bodybuilding ranges
50–60%15+Muscular enduranceHigh-rep sets, conditioning work

Most intermediate lifters training for both strength and muscle spend the majority of their time in the 70–85% range — roughly 5–12 reps. This zone provides enough mechanical tension to drive strength adaptations while accumulating sufficient volume for hypertrophy.

There is no single best zone. Effective programs cycle through different intensities across a training block — a principle called periodization. Heavy weeks at 85–90% followed by moderate weeks at 70–75% is a common and well-supported approach.

Related Reading

What Percentage of Your 1RM Should You Train At? →

Prilepin’s Chart (The NSCA Volume Guide)

Soviet sports scientist A.S. Prilepin analyzed the training logs of elite weightlifters in the 1970s and identified optimal volume ranges at each intensity. His chart has been adopted by the NSCA and is used by strength coaches to prescribe not just load, but total reps per session.

The percentage chart tells you what weight to use. Prilepin’s chart tells you how many total reps to do at that weight.

% of 1RMReps per SetOptimal Total RepsTotal Rep Range
55–65%3–62418–30
70–75%3–61812–24
80–85%2–41510–20
90%+1–274–10

How to read it: If you’re training at 80% of your 1RM, keep reps per set between 2–4, and aim for roughly 15 total reps across the session. You could get there with 5 sets of 3 or 4 sets of 4. Consistently exceeding the upper end of the range leads to more fatigue than adaptation.

Prilepin’s chart was built on Olympic lifting data and is most directly applicable to compound barbell movements — squat, bench press, deadlift, and overhead press. It’s less relevant for isolation work or machine exercises.

Bench Press 1RM: Strength Standards by Training Level

These benchmarks reflect 1RM data from tens of thousands of real lifters. They give you a data-backed reference point for where your bench press stands.

Training LevelMen (lb)Women (lb)What It Means
Beginner10355Stronger than 5% of lifters
Novice15482Stronger than 20%
Intermediate217104Stronger than 50%
Advanced291132Stronger than 80%
Elite372198+Stronger than 95%

These figures apply to a lifter weighing roughly 165–185 lb (75–85 kg) for men. Heavier lifters will generally have higher absolute numbers. For more detailed benchmarks broken down by bodyweight and age, see the related article below.

Related Reading

Average Bench Press 1RM by Age and Bodyweight →

Squat 1RM: Strength Standards by Training Level

Training LevelMen (lb)Women (lb)What It Means
Beginner14175Stronger than 5% of lifters
Novice203121Stronger than 20%
Intermediate277176Stronger than 50%
Advanced369241Stronger than 80%
Elite473318+Stronger than 95%

A common benchmark: at intermediate level, most lifters squat roughly 20–30% more than they bench press. If your squat and bench 1RMs are within 5–10% of each other, either your squat technique has room to grow or your upper body pressing is ahead of the curve.

How to Find Your 1RM

You have two options:

For most intermediate lifters, an estimated 1RM from working sets is accurate enough for percentage-based programming. You don’t need to max out every training block.

Related Reading

How to Calculate Your 1 Rep Max Without Maxing Out →

Frequently Asked Questions

What does % of 1RM mean?

It means the percentage of your one-rep maximum for a given lift. If your bench press 1RM is 200 lb, then 80% of 1RM is 160 lb. Programs written in percentages use your 1RM as a reference point to prescribe loads that match specific training goals.

How accurate is the 1RM percentage chart?

It is a population average, not an individual guarantee. Some lifters — particularly those with a higher proportion of slow-twitch muscle fibers — can complete more reps at a given percentage than the chart predicts. Use it as a starting point and adjust based on what you observe in practice.

Should I use my actual 1RM or a training max?

For most intermediate lifters, a training max (90% of your actual 1RM) is the smarter base. All percentages are calculated from the training max, not your all-out max. The result is that early weeks of a program feel achievable rather than maximal, which supports consistent progress and reduces the risk of grinding through weights you’re not ready for. Jim Wendler’s 5/3/1 program popularized this approach.

What is the NSCA 1RM chart?

The NSCA (National Strength and Conditioning Association) references Prilepin’s chart in its Essentials of Strength Training and Conditioning textbook. It is the same loading framework shown above. The NSCA uses it to guide volume and intensity prescription in evidence-based strength programs.

How often should I retest my 1RM?

Every 8–16 weeks, typically at the end of a training block. Testing more frequently adds unnecessary fatigue. Between formal tests, most lifters track progress using estimated 1RM calculated from working sets.

Related Reading

How to Warm Up for a 1 Rep Max (Protocol + Weight Guide) →

Related Reading

How Often Should I Work Out to Build Muscle? →

Calculate Your 1 Rep Max

Enter your weight and reps to get your estimated 1RM, then use the percentage chart above to set your training loads.

Use the 1RM Calculator →
Dennis Kiplimo
Written by
Dennis Kiplimo

Dennis Kiplimo is a Registered Nurse and founder of Denstar Fitness. He publishes fitness calculators and writes about training, nutrition and health on Medium.

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