The overhead press is the most honest upper body strength test you can do with a barbell. Unlike the bench press, you can’t cheat it with a big arch, leg drive, or a spotter touch. You stand up straight and push the bar from your shoulders to lockout above your head — either you can do it or you can’t.
That honesty makes it one of the best indicators of true shoulder strength and upper body stability. Here are the current standards for men and women, sorted by bodyweight and experience level, along with what they mean and how to progress through them.
Overhead Press Standards at a Glance
The OHP is harder relative to bodyweight than any other barbell lift. A beginner pressing their own bodyweight overhead is doing something that takes most lifters 3–4 years to achieve. Use these multipliers to locate yourself quickly:
| Level | Men (× bodyweight) | Women (× bodyweight) |
|---|---|---|
| Beginner | 0.35–0.45× | 0.25–0.35× |
| Novice | 0.55× | 0.4× |
| Intermediate | 0.65× | 0.5× |
| Advanced | 0.85× | 0.65× |
| Elite | 1.0×+ | 0.75×+ |
Men’s Overhead Press Standards by Bodyweight
These numbers assume a strict standing overhead press — barbell starts at shoulder level, no leg drive, locked out overhead. All figures are one-rep max.
| Bodyweight | Beginner | Novice | Intermediate | Advanced | Elite |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 130 lbs | 55 lbs | 70 lbs | 85 lbs | 110 lbs | 130 lbs |
| 150 lbs | 60 lbs | 83 lbs | 98 lbs | 128 lbs | 150 lbs |
| 170 lbs | 68 lbs | 94 lbs | 110 lbs | 145 lbs | 170 lbs |
| 190 lbs | 76 lbs | 105 lbs | 124 lbs | 162 lbs | 190 lbs |
| 210 lbs | 84 lbs | 116 lbs | 137 lbs | 179 lbs | 210 lbs |
| 230 lbs | 92 lbs | 127 lbs | 150 lbs | 196 lbs | 230 lbs |
| 250 lbs | 100 lbs | 138 lbs | 163 lbs | 213 lbs | 250 lbs |
The average trained man at 180 lbs presses approximately 126 lbs. That falls between novice and intermediate. An intermediate 190-pound man targeting the 0.65× standard should be pressing around 124 lbs.
Women’s Overhead Press Standards by Bodyweight
| Bodyweight | Beginner | Novice | Intermediate | Advanced | Elite |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 100 lbs | 28 lbs | 40 lbs | 50 lbs | 65 lbs | 75 lbs |
| 115 lbs | 33 lbs | 46 lbs | 58 lbs | 75 lbs | 86 lbs |
| 130 lbs | 38 lbs | 52 lbs | 65 lbs | 85 lbs | 98 lbs |
| 150 lbs | 43 lbs | 60 lbs | 75 lbs | 98 lbs | 113 lbs |
| 165 lbs | 50 lbs | 66 lbs | 83 lbs | 107 lbs | 124 lbs |
The average trained woman presses approximately 66 lbs. An intermediate 130-pound woman targeting the 0.5× standard should be pressing 65 lbs — very close to that average, reflecting that most women who train seriously for a couple of years reach intermediate.
OHP to Bench Press Ratio
There’s a well-established relationship between the bench press and the overhead press for balanced lifters: the OHP should sit at roughly 60–65% of your bench press. If you bench 200, your overhead press should be around 120–130 lbs.
When the OHP falls significantly below 60% of your bench, it usually indicates:
- The bench is being trained far more frequently than the OHP
- Front delts and triceps are overdeveloped relative to mid and rear deltoids
- Poor overhead positioning — a mobility or technique issue, not just weakness
When the OHP is unusually close to the bench (80%+ of bench press), it sometimes means the bench press is underperforming. Very tall lifters with long arms often have this pattern naturally — the bench becomes mechanically harder while the press stays relatively easier.
Common Overhead Press Mistakes That Kill Progress
Bar path too far forward: The bar should travel in a slight S-curve — back slightly on the way up as the head moves out of the way, then finishing directly over the midfoot. Pressing straight up with the bar in front of the face creates a longer moment arm and cuts strength significantly.
Not getting the bar out of the front rack correctly: The press starts with elbows slightly in front of the bar, not directly under it. Elbows directly below forces the bar backward and kills the pressing angle. Think “elbows forward” at the start position.
Flaring the elbows too wide: Elbows should track about 45–75° from the torso, not straight out to the sides. Wide flare puts the shoulder in a mechanically compromised position and transfers stress from the deltoid to the rotator cuff.
Not locking out: A full lockout at the top of the press means the bicep is next to the ear, not in front of it. Partial-range pressing caps how much you can lift and doesn’t train the strength through full shoulder flexion that makes the OHP valuable.
How to Actually Improve Your Overhead Press
The OHP responds best to frequency. Most programs that prioritize the bench only schedule the OHP once per week, which severely limits progress. Moving to two pressing sessions per week — one heavy, one moderate — typically adds 10–20 lbs to the OHP within 8–12 weeks for most intermediates.
The most effective accessory work for the OHP:
- Push press: Use leg drive to overload the top third of the press. Handling heavier weight above your strict press ceiling builds upper pressing strength.
- Dumbbell overhead press: Each arm has to work independently, which exposes and corrects asymmetries. Often you’ll find your dominant side has compensated for years.
- Face pulls: Rear deltoids and external rotators. Weak posterior delts are the most common muscle-specific limiter on the OHP plateau.
- Lateral raises: Mid delt development. Don’t neglect this — the OHP relies on the mid delt for much of the drive off the shoulder.
See How Your OHP Stacks Up
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