Check your deadlift
BeginnerIntermediateAdvancedElite
Quick answer
  • A 2x bodyweight deadlift is a solid milestone that most dedicated lifters can reach. A 2.5x bodyweight pull is genuinely strong.
  • Deadlift is typically the largest single lift in a powerlifting total, contributing roughly 35-40% for most raw lifters.
  • "Good" depends on your bodyweight, training age, and goals. Use the rankings calculator with your actual numbers.

Deadlift Standards by Bodyweight

These are approximate benchmarks based on competition data from OpenPowerlifting. They represent raw male lifters pulling conventional or sumo (both count equally in competition). Female standards run roughly 60-70% of male numbers at equivalent bodyweights.

BodyweightBeginnerIntermediateAdvancedElite
132 lbs / 60 kg185 lbs315 lbs425 lbs520 lbs
165 lbs / 75 kg225 lbs385 lbs500 lbs610 lbs
181 lbs / 82 kg245 lbs405 lbs535 lbs650 lbs
198 lbs / 90 kg265 lbs430 lbs565 lbs685 lbs
220 lbs / 100 kg285 lbs455 lbs600 lbs730 lbs
242 lbs / 110 kg300 lbs475 lbs625 lbs765 lbs

"Beginner" means within your first year of consistent training. "Intermediate" is 1-3 years. "Advanced" is 3-5+ years of structured programming. "Elite" is nationally competitive, roughly the top 5-10% of competition lifters.

Conventional vs Sumo

Both stances are legal in every major powerlifting federation and neither is inherently "better." Conventional tends to favor lifters with longer arms and shorter torsos. Sumo tends to favor lifters with wider hips, longer torsos, and shorter arms. Most lifters should try both and stick with whichever lets them move more weight safely. Your stance choice doesn't affect where you rank, since competition results don't separate the two.

How to Actually Know Where You Stand

Tables like the one above are rough guides. Your actual standing depends on your exact bodyweight, age, and what you're comparing against. The most accurate way to know is to enter your squat, bench, and deadlift into the rankings calculator, which compares your total against every competition result on record in your weight class.

How to Improve Your Deadlift

Deadlift responds best to moderate frequency and high intent. Most intermediate lifters do well pulling heavy once per week with a lighter variation (deficit pulls, paused deadlifts, or block pulls) on a second day. Common weak points and their fixes: if you're slow off the floor, add deficit deadlifts and front squats to strengthen your starting position. If you lose it at the knees, block pulls and heavy rows will build the lockout. If grip is the limiter, add holds at the top of your last warm-up set and train double-overhand as long as possible before switching grip. Read the full accessory selection guide for more.

Check your numbers. Enter your squat, bench, and deadlift into the Rankings Calculator to see your exact percentile, or use the 1RM Calculator to estimate your max from a recent set.