One Rep Max Calculator

A one rep max calculator estimates the maximum weight you can lift for a single repetition of any exercise — without requiring you to actually attempt a dangerous max effort. Enter the weight you lifted and how many reps you completed, and the calculator instantly gives you your estimated 1RM along with a full training load table broken down by percentage. Whether you’re a beginner tracking early strength gains or an experienced lifter planning your next training block, knowing your 1RM helps you train smarter with precise, goal-based loads.

One Rep Max Calculator — Vitaroxi
Vitaroxi — Strength & Fitness Calculator
One Rep Max Calculator

Estimate your 1RM using Epley, Brzycki & Lombardi — evidence-based formulas

1

Lift Details

kg
reps

Most accurate at 1–10 reps. Less reliable above 12.

2

Formula

Epley Most widely used Default
💪 Brzycki Best for ≤10 reps Selected
🏋️ Lombardi Powerlifting focus Selected

Your Estimated 1 Rep Max

Estimated 1RM — Epley
Weight
Reps
Intensity
All Formula Comparison
⚡ Epley
kg
Active
💪 Brzycki
kg
Active
🏋️ Lombardi
kg
Active
Training Load Table (% of estimated 1RM)
% 1RM Weight (kg) Rep Range Training Zone
Formula Reference
Epley (1985) — Default
1RM = w × (1 + r ÷ 30)
Most widely cited formula in sports science. Works well across all rep ranges and is the standard in gym software and research.
💪
Brzycki (1993)
1RM = w ÷ (1.0278 − 0.0278 × r)
Derived from powerlifting data. Highly accurate at low rep ranges (1–10). Preferred for barbell compound lifts.
🏋️
Lombardi (1989)
1RM = w × r^0.10
Uses an exponential relationship. Tends to predict a slightly higher 1RM. Commonly used in powerlifting training programs.
⚠️ Disclaimer: 1RM estimates are mathematical projections. Actual strength depends on fatigue, technique, and daily form. Never attempt a true max lift without a spotter and proper warm-up.

What Is a One Rep Max?

Your one rep max (1RM) is the heaviest weight you can lift for exactly one complete repetition with proper form. It is the gold standard for measuring absolute strength and is widely used in powerlifting, Olympic weightlifting, and general strength training. In practice, most lifters never test their true 1RM directly — instead, they use a 1RM calculator to estimate it safely from a sub-maximal effort, such as a set of 5 or 8 reps.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the weight you lifted — in kg or lb.
  2. Enter the number of reps you completed in that set.
  3. Choose a formula — Epley is selected by default as the most widely used.
  4. Hit Calculate 1RM to see your estimated max and full training load table.

For the most accurate result, use a weight you can lift for 3–10 reps taken close to failure. Very high rep sets (15+) reduce accuracy across all formulas.

Diagram showing how to use a one rep max calculator — enter weight and reps to estimate 1RM using Epley, Brzycki, and Lombardi formulas with a training load percentage table

Which Formula Should You Use?

This max lift calculator offers three evidence-based formulas:

FormulaBest ForEquation
Epley (1985)All rep ranges — defaultw × (1 + r ÷ 30)
Brzycki (1993)Low reps (1–10), powerliftingw ÷ (1.0278 − 0.0278 × r)
Lombardi (1989)Moderate reps, higher estimatew × r^0.10

For most people, Epley produces reliable results and is the industry standard. If you compete in powerlifting or primarily work in low rep ranges, Brzycki tends to be more precise. All three results are always shown side by side so you can compare.

How to Calculate One Rep Max Manually

If you prefer to calculate by hand, the Epley formula is the simplest:

1RM = Weight × (1 + Reps ÷ 30)

For example — if you bench pressed 80 kg for 8 reps:

1RM = 80 × (1 + 8 ÷ 30) = 80 × 1.267 = ~101 kg

Training Load Table — How to Use Your 1RM

Once you know your estimated 1RM, you can prescribe training loads as a percentage of that number. This is how coaches and athletes structure every type of strength programme:

% of 1RMRep RangeTraining Goal
90–100%1–3 repsMaximum strength
75–85%5–8 repsStrength & hypertrophy
65–75%8–12 repsMuscle hypertrophy
50–65%12–20 repsMuscular endurance

The calculator generates this table automatically based on your result.

Frequently Asked Questions

How accurate is a 1RM calculator?

For sets of 3–10 reps taken close to failure, estimated 1RM is typically within 5% of actual maximal strength. Accuracy drops as rep count rises above 10–12.

Any barbell or machine compound lift — bench press, squat, deadlift, overhead press, row. Less reliable for isolation exercises where fatigue patterns differ significantly.

Only with an experienced spotter, a proper warm-up, and good technique. For most training purposes, the estimated value from this calculator is sufficient.

Buttomline

Tracking your one rep max over time is one of the clearest indicators of strength progress. Use this calculator regularly — after completing a strong working set — to monitor how your max lifts are trending without the injury risk of frequent true max attempts. Save or download your result after each calculation to keep a simple record of your strength over time.

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