Check your total
BeginnerIntermediateAdvancedElite
Quick answer
  • A good powerlifting total depends entirely on your weight class. A 1,200 lb total is advanced at 181 lbs but intermediate at 242 lbs.
  • Your total (squat + bench + deadlift) is the only number that matters in competition. Individual lift numbers are secondary.
  • Use the rankings calculator to see your exact percentile against every competition lifter on record.

Male Powerlifting Total Standards (Raw)

These are approximate benchmarks based on competition data from OpenPowerlifting. All numbers are for raw (no supportive gear) lifters.

Weight ClassBeginnerIntermediateAdvancedElite
132 lbs / 60 kg435 lbs765 lbs1,045 lbs1,290 lbs
165 lbs / 75 kg555 lbs945 lbs1,240 lbs1,530 lbs
181 lbs / 82 kg605 lbs1,015 lbs1,335 lbs1,640 lbs
198 lbs / 90 kg650 lbs1,080 lbs1,410 lbs1,730 lbs
220 lbs / 100 kg700 lbs1,140 lbs1,495 lbs1,840 lbs
242 lbs / 110 kg740 lbs1,195 lbs1,560 lbs1,925 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.

Female Powerlifting Total Standards (Raw)

Weight ClassBeginnerIntermediateAdvancedElite
105 lbs / 48 kg220 lbs430 lbs600 lbs760 lbs
114 lbs / 52 kg250 lbs475 lbs660 lbs830 lbs
132 lbs / 60 kg290 lbs540 lbs745 lbs935 lbs
148 lbs / 67 kg320 lbs590 lbs810 lbs1,015 lbs
165 lbs / 75 kg345 lbs625 lbs855 lbs1,075 lbs
181 lbs / 82 kg365 lbs660 lbs895 lbs1,120 lbs

Total vs Individual Lifts

In competition, your placing is determined by total, not by any individual lift. A lifter who squats 400, benches 300, and deadlifts 500 (1,200 total) beats a lifter who squats 450, benches 250, and deadlifts 475 (1,175 total), even though the second lifter has a bigger squat. This is why balanced development across all three lifts matters more than chasing a huge number on your strongest lift.

Typical contribution to total for raw lifters: squat 35-38%, bench 22-27%, deadlift 35-40%. If one of your lifts is contributing significantly less than these ranges, that's where your total has the most room to grow.

How to Grow Your Total

Identify your weakest lift relative to the ratios above and prioritize it. For most lifters, bench is the smallest contributor and the hardest to move, so improving squat and deadlift technique often yields bigger total gains. A structured program with progressive overload across all three lifts is more effective than maxing out frequently. Use the Program Generator to build a periodized plan based on your current numbers.

When you're within striking distance of a total milestone, a peaking program can help you hit it on meet day. Plan your attempt selection conservatively: the biggest totals come from going 9-for-9 with smart jumps, not from swinging for the fences on third attempts.

Where do you actually rank? Enter your total and weight class into the Rankings Calculator for your exact percentile, or compare your relative strength using the Wilks / DOTS / IPF GL Calculator.