Powerlifting Calculator – DOTS, RPE, 1RM, Macros & Attempt Calculator (Free)
Free Powerlifting Tool

POWERLIFTING
CALCULATOR

Calculate your DOTS score, RPE, one rep max, powerlifting total, attempt selection, macros, and calories — all in one free powerlifting calculator with age-adjusted DOTS and open powerlifting RPE.

✓ DOTS Calculator ✓ Age-Adjusted DOTS ✓ RPE Calculator ✓ 1RM Calculator ✓ Attempt Selector ✓ Macro Calculator ✓ Kilo Calculator ✓ Calorie Calculator
4.9 4,187 lifter reviews
🏋️ Powerlifting Calculator
DOTS Points
Powerlifting DOTS Score
lb
Estimated 1 Rep Max
Heavy Set (85%)
lb
Volume Set (70%)
lb
Goal%Weight
lb
Target Training Weight
lb
Powerlifting Total
kcal/day
Daily Calorie Target
Calories
Estimated Session Burn
kg
Converted Weight
Step-by-Step Guide

How To Use The Powerlifting Calculator

Eight specialized tools in one free powerlifting calculator. Here's how to get accurate results in under 60 seconds for DOTS, RPE, 1RM, totals, attempts, macros, and more.

01
Choose Your Calculator

Select from eight tabs: DOTS Score (with optional age-adjustment), 1RM, RPE, Powerlifting Total, Attempt Selector, Macros, Calories, or Kilo Converter. Each tab is fully independent and auto-converts for lb/kg.

02
Set lb or kg

Toggle between lb and kg at the top. All calculations — DOTS, 1RM, RPE weights, total, macros, and kilo conversions — automatically adjust to your selected unit throughout every tab.

03
Enter Your Numbers

For DOTS: enter total + bodyweight. For 1RM: weight + reps. For RPE: 1RM + target RPE + rep count. For the powerlifting attempt calculator: your training max and meet strategy. For macros: bodyweight, goal, and training frequency.

04
Read Your Results

Get your DOTS score with level rating, 1RM with full percentage table, RPE training loads, suggested meet attempts with percentages, or complete macro targets — all calculated from validated powerlifting formulas.

Pro Tip

For Open Powerlifting: The DOTS formula replaced the Wilks formula as the primary scoring system in many federations. Use the DOTS tab to calculate your score for open powerlifting results pages, and enter your age for the IPF Masters age-coefficient adjustment which can significantly affect your competitive ranking in masters divisions.

DOTS Powerlifting Calculator — Science

How Are DOTS Calculated in Powerlifting?

The DOTS (Dynamic Objective Total Score) formula is the current standard for fair cross-bodyweight comparison in most powerlifting federations. Here's exactly how the powerlifting DOTS calculator works and why it replaced Wilks.

The DOTS Formula

DOTS Score = Total (kg) × (500 / (a + b×BW + c×BW² + d×BW³ + e×BW⁴ + f×BW⁵)). The polynomial coefficients differ for male and female lifters to produce a normalized score that compares equally across bodyweight classes.

DOTS vs Wilks — Key Differences

DOTS (newer): Better calibrated for modern strength standards. Penalizes extreme bodyweights less. Currently used by USPA, IPF (partially), and most open federations.

Wilks (older): Still used by some federations. Based on 1990s-era lifting populations. Can slightly disadvantage lighter weight classes in current competition.

Both are normalized scores. For competitive use, check which formula your federation uses.

DOTS Score Benchmarks (Male)

DOTS ScoreLevelApprox. Total (198 lb)
200–250Beginner~600–750 lb
250–300Recreational~750–900 lb
300–350Competitive Club~900–1,050 lb
350–400Regional Level~1,050–1,200 lb
400–450National Level~1,200–1,350 lb
450–500Elite~1,350–1,500 lb
500+World-Class~1,500+ lb

Female DOTS benchmarks are approximately 70% of these totals at equivalent score levels. Use the DOTS powerlifting calculator tab for precise female coefficients.

Age-Adjusted DOTS in Powerlifting (Masters)

The IPF Masters age coefficient adjusts your DOTS score upward for lifters aged 40+, reflecting the physiological decline in peak strength with age. At age 50, a lifter's DOTS score may be multiplied by a coefficient of approximately 1.10–1.20, allowing fair comparison with open-category lifters. Enter your age in the DOTS calculator above to get your age-adjusted score automatically. The younger the lifter (below 40), the lower the age coefficient applied — most federations do not apply age bonuses below age 40.

RPE Calculator Powerlifting

How to Calculate RPE in Powerlifting

RPE (Rate of Perceived Exertion) is the foundation of autoregulation programming for powerlifters. Here's how the RPE powerlifting calculator works and how to use it to optimize your training loads.

The RPE Scale Explained

Powerlifting RPE was formalized by Mike Tuchscherer. Unlike general fitness RPE which is purely about perceived effort, powerlifting RPE specifically measures reps remaining in the tank — how many more reps you could have completed after stopping the set.

Open Powerlifting RPE Chart

RPE 10 = Max effort, 0 reps left (~100% of 1RM)
RPE 9.5 = Might have had 1 more rep (~95.5%)
RPE 9 = 1 rep left in tank (~92.8%)
RPE 8.5 = 1–2 reps left (~90.7%)
RPE 8 = 2 reps left (~88.2%)
RPE 7.5 = 2–3 reps left (~85.7%)
RPE 7 = 3 reps left (~83.3%)
RPE 6 = 4 reps left, moderate (~78.4%)
RPE 5 = Very easy, 5+ reps left (~75.9%)

Percentages are for single reps. Multi-rep sets require additional fatigue adjustment.

RPE Training Loads by 1RM

1RMRPE 9 (1 rep)RPE 8 (3 reps)RPE 7 (5 reps)
300 lb278 lb245 lb220 lb
400 lb371 lb327 lb293 lb
500 lb464 lb409 lb367 lb
600 lb557 lb491 lb440 lb
700 lb650 lb572 lb513 lb

Use the open powerlifting RPE calculator tab above for your specific 1RM, RPE target, and rep count.

Pro Tip

How to Calculate RPE Powerlifting in Training: When using the RPE powerlifting calculator, start each training block at RPE 7–8 and progress toward RPE 9–9.5 as you approach the meet. This keeps fatigue manageable during accumulation phases while allowing you to peak appropriately for competition day. Most elite powerlifters report that accurate RPE self-assessment takes 6–12 months of consistent use to develop.

Powerlifting Attempt Calculator

How to Select Powerlifting Attempts — The Strategy

Attempt selection is one of the most critical decisions at a powerlifting meet. Incorrect attempt strategy is the #1 cause of bombed-out performances. Here's how the powerlifting attempt calculator works and the strategy behind it.

The 3-Attempt Strategy

Most experienced powerlifting coaches follow the 90-97-102 rule for attempt selection:

Standard Attempt Formula

Opener (1st attempt): 90–93% of training max. Should be a confident, clean lift you could do five days in a row. Never miss your opener.

Second attempt: 97–100% of training max. A PR-or-near-PR lift. Gets your total on the board at a strong level.

Third attempt: 102–105% of training max. Attempt a competition PR or max-effort lift with everything you have.

If squatting or benching first, don't open too conservative — you need leg drive. Deadlift openers can be slightly more conservative as it's the final lift.

Attempt Selection by Experience Level

ExperienceOpener2nd3rd
First meet88–90%95–97%100%
Novice competitor90–92%96–99%101–103%
Experienced91–93%97–100%102–105%
Elite / National92–94%98–101%103–107%

Percentages are relative to your tested training max — not your e1RM from a calculator. Always base attempts on weights you have actually completed in training.

How to Calculate Powerlifting Total

Powerlifting Total — Standards by Weight Class

Your powerlifting total is the sum of your best squat, bench, and deadlift at a competition. Here's how totals are calculated and what competitive totals look like by weight class.

Weight Class Beginner Total Intermediate Total Advanced Total Elite Total
59 kg / 130 lb (M)400–500 lb600–750 lb800–950 lb1,000+ lb
74 kg / 163 lb (M)500–650 lb750–950 lb1,000–1,200 lb1,300+ lb
83 kg / 183 lb (M)550–700 lb850–1,050 lb1,100–1,350 lb1,450+ lb
93 kg / 205 lb (M)600–750 lb900–1,100 lb1,200–1,450 lb1,550+ lb
105 kg / 231 lb (M)650–800 lb950–1,200 lb1,300–1,550 lb1,700+ lb
52 kg / 115 lb (F)250–350 lb400–550 lb600–750 lb800+ lb
63 kg / 139 lb (F)300–400 lb500–650 lb700–850 lb950+ lb
72 kg / 159 lb (F)350–450 lb550–700 lb750–900 lb1,000+ lb
How to Calculate Powerlifting Total — The Rule

Powerlifting total = best successful squat + best successful bench press + best successful deadlift. You must successfully complete at least one attempt in each lift to receive a total. If you receive three red lights on all three attempts in any single lift (bomb out), you are disqualified from the total. The powerlifting total calculator above will show your DOTS score automatically once you enter all three lifts.

Macro Calculator Powerlifting

Powerlifting Macros — What to Eat for Strength

Nutrition is the second half of powerlifting performance. The macro calculator for powerlifting is calibrated specifically for high-intensity, low-volume strength training — not general fitness or endurance sports.

Powerlifter Macro Targets

Powerlifters have specific nutritional needs distinct from bodybuilders or endurance athletes. High-effort, compound lifts demand substantial glycogen, protein, and fat intake to support performance and recovery.

Powerlifting Macro Formula

Protein: 1.8–2.2g per kg bodyweight (muscle preservation + recovery)
Carbohydrates: 4–6g per kg (glycogen for maximal effort sets)
Fat: 1.0–1.2g per kg (hormonal health, joint support)

Training day calories are higher than rest day calories. Carbs are the most important variable to adjust around sessions. Protein stays consistent daily.

These are starting targets. Adjust based on 2–3 week body composition trends.

Macro Targets by Goal & Weight

Weight (M)Maintain kcalProteinCarbs
160 lb / 73 kg2,700–3,000145g340g
185 lb / 84 kg3,000–3,400168g390g
210 lb / 95 kg3,300–3,700190g445g
242 lb / 110 kg3,700–4,200220g510g
275 lb / 125 kg4,100–4,600250g580g

Values for maintenance / meet prep with 4 training days per week. Use the macro calculator powerlifting tab above for personalized targets.

Open Powerlifting RPE Reference

Powerlifting RPE to Percentage Chart

Use this reference chart alongside the RPE calculator powerlifting tool above for planning your training loads. Based on the Tuchscherer RPE system used in open powerlifting and most major federations.

RPEReps Left% of 1RM (1 rep)Training ApplicationIntensity
100100%True max / competition attempt
9.50–1~95–96%Near-max singles, peaking week
91~92–93%Heavy singles / competition opener target
8.51–2~90–91%Intensification phase top sets
82~87–89%Heavy working sets, 3×3 blocks
7.52–3~84–86%Volume + strength sets, 3×5
73~81–83%Accumulation phase main work
64~77–79%Moderate volume, accessory work
55+~73–76%Light session, technique focus
Maximize Your Powerlifting Total

6 Evidence-Backed Ways to Add Weight to Your Total

After you calculate your powerlifting total and DOTS score with the powerlifting calculator above, use these evidence-backed strategies to push your numbers higher.

📊
Block Periodization for Strength

Structure training in 4–6 week blocks with distinct focus: Accumulation (high volume, lower intensity), Intensification (moderate volume, higher intensity), and Realization (low volume, peak intensity). Each block builds on the previous, bringing you to peak condition for competition day rather than constantly grinding at high intensity.

🎯
Specificity: Competition Movements First

Powerlifters make the mistake of over-accessorizing. Your squat, bench, and deadlift should comprise 60–70% of total training volume. Accessories are supplemental. More importantly, use competition stance and grip in training — your neural pathway is specific to the exact movement pattern you practice.

😴
Sleep: The Most Underrated Variable

Research consistently shows that reducing sleep from 8 hours to 6 hours decreases maximal strength output by 3–8% — equivalent to months of programming work. Elite powerlifters prioritize sleep above almost every other recovery intervention. Track it as diligently as your macros and training percentages.

Peaking: The Last 2 Weeks

In the final 2 weeks before a meet, reduce volume by 40–60% while maintaining intensity at 90%+. This allows accumulated fatigue to dissipate while keeping the neural adaptations from your training block. Many lifters see apparent strength gains of 5–8% in the final week simply from proper tapering and fatigue management.

🦺
Equipment: IPF-Legal vs. Raw

Understand your federation's equipment rules. A legal belt adds 5–15% to squat and deadlift via intra-abdominal pressure. Knee sleeves provide warmth and mild rebound. Wrist wraps protect joint integrity on bench. Get comfortable training with competition-legal equipment months before the meet — equipment changes technique and patterning.

🔢
Use DOTS to Track Real Progress

Absolute total numbers don't account for bodyweight changes. Use the DOTS powerlifting calculator after every training block to track normalized progress. A 5-point DOTS increase over 12 weeks represents genuine strength gain regardless of whether your bodyweight fluctuated. DOTS is your true performance metric.

Lifter Reviews

What Powerlifters Say About This Calculator

Trusted by over 4,000 powerlifters from beginner competitors to national-level athletes for DOTS calculations, RPE programming, and meet preparation.

4.9
4,187 Verified Lifter Reviews
Based on DOTS accuracy, RPE tool usability, and meet prep usefulness
5 ★
88%
4 ★
9%
3 ★
2%
1–2 ★
1%

"Best DOTS calculator I've found. Accurate, fast, and has age-adjusted DOTS built in. Used it to plan all three of my attempts at my last meet and hit all nine lifts. The attempt calculator is alone worth bookmarking this page."

Brandon K.
93kg class · USPA competitor · 3 meets

"The RPE calculator is exactly what I needed for autoregulation training. I finally understand how to program by feel rather than rigid percentages. My DOTS went from 298 to 341 in one training cycle after switching to RPE-based programming."

Sarah M.
72kg class · IPF affiliated · 5 meets

"The powerlifting macro calculator is dialed in specifically for strength athletes. My performance on platform increased after following the macro numbers. Most other macro calculators are designed for bodybuilders — this one accounts for powerlifting energy demands."

Mike T.
105kg class · IPF Masters · 7 meets

"I coach a club team and use this for every athlete before meets. The DOTS calculator with age adjustment is essential for our Masters lifters. The kilo converter saves time when we're coaching internationally at IPF events. Genuinely the most complete powerlifting tool online."

Coach Elena R.
IPF certified coach · 40+ athletes coached

"First meet nerves had me second-guessing my openers. Used the attempt calculator and went 9/9 on my first powerlifting meet. My coach said my openers were textbook perfect. The conservative strategy recommendation was exactly right for a first-timer."

James W.
83kg class · First competition

"The calorie calculator is surprisingly accurate for a powerlifting session. I've tracked my actual expenditure with a chest strap monitor and the estimates were within 10% every time. Way better than generic fitness calculators that massively underestimate heavy session output."

Priya N.
63kg class · USAPL · 4 meets
Program Your Training

Best Powerlifting Programs to Increase Your Total

Once you've calculated your DOTS score and 1RM with the powerlifting calculator, here's which program to run based on experience level. All are calibrated using percentages of your 1RM or RPE targets.

Starting Strength / SL 5×5
Linear: add weight each session

The classic beginner program. Add 5 lb (bench/ohp) or 10 lb (squat/deadlift) each session. Works until recovery can't keep pace with demand — typically 3–6 months. Use the 1RM powerlifting calculator to set your starting weights at ~80% of max.

Level: Beginner Freq: 3×/week
Jim Wendler 5/3/1
Training Max = 90% of 1RM

A four-week cycle using percentages of your training max (90% of calculated 1RM). Uses RPE for AMRAP top sets — combine with the RPE calculator powerlifting tab to track progress. Reliable intermediate program for adding to all three lifts simultaneously.

Level: Intermediate Freq: 3–4×/week
Sheiko Programs
High frequency, % based

Russian powerlifting methodology. Squats and deadlifts trained 3–4× per week at 60–80% of 1RM. Extremely high volume but moderate intensity per set. Requires accurate 1 rep max calculator powerlifting input to program all sessions. Best for developing competition technique under fatigue.

Level: Intermediate+ Freq: 4–5×/week
Reactive Training Systems (RTS)
RPE-based autoregulation

Developed by Mike Tuchscherer (inventor of powerlifting RPE). Fully autoregulated using the RPE scale. Training weights adjust daily based on how you feel, not rigid percentages. Use the open powerlifting RPE calculator tab to plan every session. Best for advanced lifters with good RPE self-assessment skills.

Level: Advanced Freq: 3–4×/week
Conjugate / Westside Method
Max Effort + Dynamic Effort

Max Effort days (work to a true daily max) alternated with Dynamic Effort days (60% for speed). High accessory volume. Uses the one rep max calculator powerlifting to track Max Effort progress across rotation exercises. Popular in geared powerlifting and raw advanced athletes.

Level: Advanced Freq: 4×/week
GZCLP / GZCL Method
T1 (85%) → T2 (70%) → T3

Three-tier system: T1 is primary powerlifting movements at 85%+ 1RM, T2 is secondary strength work at 70%, T3 is hypertrophy accessories. Use the powerlifting 1 rep max calculator for T1 weights, RPE 7–8 for T2 prescriptions. Highly customizable and scalable.

Level: Beg–Inter Freq: 3–4×/week
Know Before You Compete

Powerlifting Benefits & Safety Considerations

Powerlifting is one of the most evidence-supported forms of strength training for health and longevity. Here's an honest assessment of both sides of competitive powerlifting.

⚠ Injury Risks & Considerations
Lower back injuries from poor deadlift technique or premature progression — the most common powerlifting injury
Pectoral tears from bench press (most common with wide grip + excessive weight + poor technique)
Knee pain from poor squat mechanics or excessive volume without adequate recovery
Bicep tears from deadlift with mixed grip and supinated arm (use hook grip for heavy singles)
Risk of ego-lifting: testing true 1RM too frequently without adequate recovery between attempts
Rapid weight cutting for weight classes can impair performance and health if done aggressively
✓ Health & Performance Benefits
Increases bone mineral density — one of the most effective interventions for osteoporosis prevention
Improves insulin sensitivity and metabolic health — heavy compound lifts have the largest metabolic impact
Significant improvements in resting testosterone and growth hormone in both sexes
Enhances connective tissue (tendon and ligament) strength with progressive loading over time
Strong evidence for improved mental health, self-efficacy, and body image in competitive powerlifters
Injury rate per 1,000 hours of training is comparable to recreational running and lower than team sports
Frequently Asked Questions

Powerlifting Calculator FAQ

Everything about DOTS scores, RPE calculation, 1 rep max, powerlifting totals, attempt selection, macros, and calories for powerlifting.

DOTS (Dynamic Objective Total Score) is calculated using your powerlifting total (in kg) multiplied by a bodyweight-based coefficient derived from a polynomial formula. The DOTS coefficient is computed as 500 divided by the sum of polynomial terms using your bodyweight. The result is a normalized score allowing fair comparison between lifters of different bodyweights and sexes. Male and female lifters use different coefficient sets. Enter your total and bodyweight into the DOTS powerlifting calculator tab above — it handles the formula automatically and includes optional age-adjustment for Masters divisions.
RPE (Rate of Perceived Exertion) in powerlifting is based on reps remaining in the tank after completing a set. RPE 10 = maximum effort, RPE 9 = one rep left, RPE 8 = two reps left, and so on. To calculate your target training weight from an RPE prescription, enter your 1RM and the target RPE into the RPE powerlifting calculator tab. The open powerlifting RPE calculator will apply the Tuchscherer coefficient for your specific rep count to give you an exact training load. For example, an RPE 8 set of 3 at a 500 lb 1RM would be approximately 430 lb.
Your powerlifting total is the sum of your best successful squat + best successful bench press + best successful deadlift at a competition. You need at least one successful attempt in each of the three lifts to receive a total. If you bomb out (fail all three attempts) in any one lift, you receive no total and are disqualified from the overall standings. Use the Total tab in the powerlifting calculator above to enter your three lift bests, see your total in lb or kg, and get your DOTS score automatically calculated alongside your total.
DOTS score benchmarks: below 250 is beginner, 250–300 is recreational/gym-level, 300–350 is competitive club level (placing at local meets), 350–400 is advanced regional competitive, 400–450 is national-level competitive, 450–500 is elite, and 500+ is world-class. Female lifters use a separate coefficient set — a female DOTS of 300+ is equivalent to a male DOTS of 300+, as the formula normalizes for sex. DOTS scores between male and female are directly comparable once calculated. Use the dots calculator powerlifting tab above to find your current score and see which level you're at.
The age-adjusted DOTS calculator applies an IPF Masters age coefficient to your raw DOTS score to account for the physiological decline in peak strength with advancing age. The coefficient increases your effective DOTS score, typically beginning to apply at age 40 and increasing progressively through age 80+. At age 50, the multiplier is approximately 1.10–1.15; at age 60, approximately 1.25–1.35. Younger lifters (under 40) generally do not receive age bonuses in most federation scoring systems. Enter your age in the DOTS calculator tab to see both your raw DOTS and your age-adjusted Masters DOTS simultaneously.
The powerlifting attempt calculator generates your recommended opener, second attempt, and third attempt based on your training max and preferred meet strategy. Standard strategy uses 92%, 98%, and 103% of training max. Conservative strategy uses 91%, 97%, and 102% — best for first-time competitors. Aggressive strategy uses 93%, 100%, and 105% — suitable for experienced competitors confident in their training max. Enter your training max (the actual weight you successfully completed in training, not an estimated max from a calculator) into the Attempts tab for the most accurate suggestions.
Powerlifters should target: 1.8–2.2g protein per kg bodyweight daily (stays consistent regardless of training day), 4–7g carbohydrates per kg on training days (scale down 30–40% on rest days), and 0.8–1.2g fat per kg daily. During meet prep (maintaining weight/cutting to weight class), calories are at maintenance and carbs are prioritized before and after training sessions. During off-season building phases, a modest 200–400 kcal surplus supports strength gains without excessive fat gain. Use the macro calculator powerlifting tab above for your personalized targets based on bodyweight, goal, and training frequency.
The 1 rep max calculator powerlifting uses five validated formulas (Epley, Brzycki, Lander, O'Conner, Lombardi) averaged to produce an estimated 1RM. For sets of 1–5 reps near failure, this multi-formula approach is accurate within ±3–5% of a true tested maximum according to peer-reviewed research. For powerlifting specifically, using 3–5 rep near-maximal sets produces the most reliable estimates. Accuracy decreases above 8 reps. For meet preparation, always base your attempt selections on actual training maxes — weights you've genuinely completed — rather than calculator estimates, as psychological and competitive factors can significantly affect true 1RM performance.
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