Deadlift standards at 65 kg
Where a 65 kg lifter sits across the five training- population bands for the deadlift. Numbers are 1RM estimates — not working sets. Both male and female columns below; pick the one that applies.
This page is about bodyweight, not bar weight.
“65 kg” here means the lifter weighs 65 kg. If you meant a 65 kg deadlift on the bar, use Strength Check and enter the lift, reps, sex, age, and your actual bodyweight. The verdict changes a lot between, say, a 60 kg lifter and a 100 kg lifter using the same bar weight.
1RM standards (kg) at 65 kg bodyweight
| Band | Male | Female | ×bw |
|---|---|---|---|
| Untrained | 65 | 46 | 1.00× / 0.70× |
| Novice | 98 | 65 | 1.50× / 1.00× |
| Intermediate | 130 | 91 | 2.00× / 1.40× |
| Advanced | 179 | 120 | 2.75× / 1.85× |
| Elite | 211 | 146 | 3.25× / 2.25× |
Multipliers are ratio-of-bodyweight per ExRx training- population norms. Numbers in the male/female columns are 65 × the multiplier rounded to the nearest kg.
Cross-lift balance at 65 kg
Typical training-population ratios for a 65 kg lifter (StrengthMath methodology, practitioner consensus across NSCA Essentials + Practical Programming):
- Squat : deadlift — typically 1.2–1.5×
- Deadlift : OHP — typically 1.4–1.6× (deadlift divided by overhead press; OHP is the slowest of the four lifts to develop)
See the strength check calculator for the full balance report with your actual numbers.
Progression timeline (deadlift, 65 kg)
- Novice → Intermediate: 6–12 months on linear progression. Linear progression — 3-4 sessions/week, add 2.5 kg (or 5 lb) per session until it stalls. Eat enough.
- Intermediate → Advanced: 18–36 months. Periodization required — 4-5 sessions/week, weekly or monthly progression (5/3/1, DUP, conjugate). Linear adds stop working past this band.
Ranges sourced from Rippetoe Practical Programming + NSCA Essentials. Per-lift speed adjustment (squat fastest, OHP slowest) is StrengthMath methodology.
1RM reliability at 65 kg
A 65 kg male intermediate deadlift (130 kg) lifted at 5 reps projects to a 1RM of roughly 147 kg ± 3 kg (StrengthMath HIGH reliability band, ~±2% — informed by LeSuer 1997's directional finding that the four formulas converge at ≤5 reps; specific ± bound is SM methodology). At 8–10 reps the range widens to ~±5%; past 10 reps it gets noisy. Use the check calculator for your actual numbers + the four-formula breakdown.
Enter your weight × reps and get a percentile + reliability band + closing-the-gap timeline in one screen.