In gym shorthand, “a plate” almost always means a 45-pound (20 kg) plate — the large round iron or rubber disc that dominates the weight room floor. When someone says they’re benching “two plates,” they mean two 45-pound plates on each side of the bar, not two total. Understanding that convention — and the math behind it — is one of the first things you pick up in a serious gym.
Here’s the complete reference for what every common plate configuration actually weighs.
How Much Is a Plate? (45-lb Plates, Standard 45-lb Bar)
This table covers the standard gym setup: a 45-lb Olympic barbell with 45-lb plates on each side.
| Plates Per Side | Total Weight (lbs) | Plates Only (lbs) | What Lifters Call It |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 plate | 135 lbs | 90 lbs | “A plate” / “135” |
| 2 plates | 225 lbs | 180 lbs | “Two plates” / “225” |
| 3 plates | 315 lbs | 270 lbs | “Three plates” / “315” |
| 4 plates | 405 lbs | 360 lbs | “Four plates” / “405” |
| 5 plates | 495 lbs | 450 lbs | “Five plates” / “495” |
| 6 plates | 585 lbs | 540 lbs | “Six plates” |
The math is straightforward: each additional plate on each side adds 90 lbs to the total (45 lbs × 2 sides). Every lift milestone is a multiple of 90 plus the 45-lb bar: 135, 225, 315, 405, 495, 585.
The Same Table in Kilograms (20 kg Plates, 20 kg Bar)
Metric gyms use 20 kg plates as the standard large plate, with a 20 kg bar. The milestones land on cleaner numbers:
| Plates Per Side | Total Weight (kg) | Approx. in lbs |
|---|---|---|
| 1 plate (20 kg) | 60 kg | 132 lbs |
| 2 plates (20 kg) | 100 kg | 220 lbs |
| 3 plates (20 kg) | 140 kg | 309 lbs |
| 4 plates (20 kg) | 180 kg | 397 lbs |
| 5 plates (20 kg) | 220 kg | 485 lbs |
| 6 plates (20 kg) | 260 kg | 573 lbs |
Note: 45 lb plates and 20 kg plates are close but not identical. 45 lbs = 20.4 kg. So four 45-lb plates on each side (405 lbs) is slightly more than four 20 kg plates on each side (397 lbs). In practice this difference is minor, but it matters in competition.
Common Weights That Aren’t Whole Plate Numbers
Most training weights fall between plate milestones. Here are the most common gym weights and how they’re loaded:
| Target Weight (lbs) | Plates Per Side |
|---|---|
| 95 lbs | 1×25 |
| 115 lbs | 1×35 |
| 135 lbs | 1×45 |
| 155 lbs | 1×45 + 1×10 |
| 165 lbs | 1×45 + 1×10 + 1×5 |
| 185 lbs | 1×45 + 1×25 |
| 205 lbs | 1×45 + 1×25 + 1×10 |
| 225 lbs | 2×45 |
| 245 lbs | 2×45 + 1×10 |
| 275 lbs | 2×45 + 1×25 |
| 315 lbs | 3×45 |
| 365 lbs | 3×45 + 1×25 |
| 405 lbs | 4×45 |
| 455 lbs | 4×45 + 1×25 |
| 495 lbs | 4×45 + 1×25 + 1×5 |
Why These Milestones Matter
The plate milestones — 135, 225, 315, 405 — are informal strength benchmarks in the weight room. A 225-pound bench press is widely considered the entry point to “serious” bench pressing for men. A 315-pound squat clears the intermediate standard for most training populations. A 405-pound deadlift is four plates — a number that carries weight in powerlifting circles long before competition ever enters the picture.
These numbers exist because the equipment creates them naturally. The jump from one plate to two, two to three, three to four: each is exactly 90 lbs and requires loading an entire additional plate on each side. The milestones aren’t arbitrary; they’re built into how barbells are loaded.
Competition Plate Colors (IWF Standard)
In competitive weightlifting and powerlifting, plates are color-coded for fast visual identification. The International Weightlifting Federation (IWF) standard is:
- Red plates: 25 kg (55 lbs)
- Blue plates: 20 kg (44 lbs)
- Yellow plates: 15 kg (33 lbs)
- Green plates: 10 kg (22 lbs)
- White plates: 5 kg (11 lbs)
If you train in a facility with color-coded bumper plates, an experienced eye can read the bar’s total weight at a glance. In most commercial gyms, iron plates are uniform black regardless of weight — you have to count individually.
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Use the Barbell Calculator →Related Reading
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