One Rep Max Calculator

Free · No sign-up · Works on your phone between sets

Units

Estimated one rep max

115.5 kg

Average of seven formulas. Range: 112.5119 kg.

116.7 kgEpley
112.5 kgBrzycki
117.5 kgLombardi
113.7 kgLander
119 kgMayhew
112.5 kgO'Conner
116.6 kgWathen

What is a one rep max?

Your one rep max (1RM) is the heaviest weight you can lift for a single repetition with good form. It is the standard measure of maximal strength, and the anchor for percentage-based programs: when a plan prescribes “5 reps at 75%”, that percentage refers to your 1RM.

You do not need to actually test it. A hard set of 2–10 reps predicts your max closely enough for programming, without the fatigue and injury risk of grinding out a true single.

How the estimate works

Each formula models the relationship between the reps you can do at a weight and your maximum. This calculator runs seven published formulas — Epley, Brzycki, Lombardi, Lander, Mayhew, O'Conner, and Wathen — and headlines the average, showing the min–max spread so you can see the uncertainty honestly.

The two most common formulas: Epley estimates 1RM = weight × (1 + reps ÷ 30), and Brzycki estimates 1RM = weight × 36 ÷ (37 − reps). They agree exactly at 10 reps and drift slightly apart elsewhere.

If you log RPE or RIR, use the reps-in-reserve field: a set of 5 with 2 reps left in the tank is treated as 7 effective reps, which stops submaximal sets from underestimating your max.

Reps to percentage of 1RM

The relationship also works as a quick reference. Roughly, each rep you can do at a weight maps to a percentage of your max (Brzycki formula, rounded):

Reps% of 1RMReps% of 1RM
1100%783%
297%881%
394%978%
492%1075%
589%1172%
686%1269%

So a weight you can lift for 5 clean reps is about 89% of your max. For the full breakdown from 100% down to 30% with training zones, use the percentage chart.

Using your 1RM in training

Most working weights are percentages of your 1RM — heavy strength work at 80–95%, hypertrophy work at 60–80%. Once you have your estimate, the percentage chart turns it into every training load, and the warm-up calculator builds the ramp to get there.

Gript estimates your 1RM automatically from every set you log and charts it over time — so you can watch your strength trend instead of testing it.

Download Gript for iPhone →

Frequently asked questions

How do you calculate your one rep max?

Take a weight you can lift for 2–10 clean reps and plug it into a 1RM formula. The most common is Epley: 1RM = weight × (1 + reps ÷ 30). For example, 100 kg for 5 reps estimates 100 × (1 + 5/30) ≈ 117 kg. This calculator runs Epley, Brzycki, and Lombardi at once and shows you the spread.

How accurate are 1RM formulas?

Estimates are usually within about 5–10% of a true max when you use a set of 10 reps or fewer. Accuracy is best in the 2–6 rep range. Above 10 reps, muscular endurance starts to dominate and the formulas drift apart.

Which 1RM formula should I use?

Epley is the most widely used default and what most apps use. Brzycki gives slightly lower estimates at higher reps, and Lombardi is more conservative at low reps. If you just need one number, use Epley — or take the average this calculator shows.

Do I need to test my actual 1RM?

For most lifters, no. Testing a true max is fatiguing and carries injury risk. An estimated 1RM from a hard set of 3–5 reps is accurate enough to set training percentages, and you can re-estimate it every session without burning out.

This tool answers one question. Gript tracks every workout and shows you the trend — free on the App Store.

Download Gript