Strength standards

Squat standards at 106 kg

Where a 106 kg lifter sits across the five training- population bands for the squat. Numbers are 1RM estimates — not working sets. Both male and female columns below; pick the one that applies.

1RM standards (kg) at 106 kg bodyweight

BandMaleFemale×bw
Untrained85640.80× / 0.60×
Novice133901.25× / 0.85×
Intermediate1861331.75× / 1.25×
Advanced2651702.50× / 1.60×
Elite3182123.00× / 2.00×

Multipliers are ratio-of-bodyweight per ExRx training- population norms. Numbers in the male/female columns are 106 × the multiplier rounded to the nearest kg.

Cross-lift balance at 106 kg

Typical training-population ratios for a 106 kg lifter (StrengthMath methodology, practitioner consensus across NSCA Essentials + Practical Programming):

  • Deadlift : squat — typically 1.4–1.6×
  • Squat : OHP — typically 1.4–1.6× (squat 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 (squat, 106 kg)

Ranges sourced from Rippetoe Practical Programming + NSCA Essentials. Per-lift speed adjustment (squat fastest, OHP slowest) is StrengthMath methodology.

1RM reliability at 106 kg

A 106 kg male intermediate squat (186 kg) lifted at 5 reps projects to a 1RM of roughly 210 kg ± 3 kg (high-reliability range per LeSuer 1997 — formulas converge within ~±2% at ≤5 reps). 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.

Calculate your strength check →

Enter your weight × reps and get a percentile + reliability band + closing-the-gap timeline in one screen.

Adjacent bodyweights (squat)

Other lifts at 106 kg