When to Test Your True 1-Rep Max (And When Estimation is Smarter)
The 1-rep max — the heaviest weight you can lift once with good form — is a useful number. It anchors percentage-based programming, tracks long-term strength progress, and satisfies the natural curiosity of "how strong am I really?"
What's less useful is testing it constantly. Most lifters test 1RMs more often than they should and use the numbers less than they could.
When to actually test
Three legitimate scenarios:
1. End of a strength block
If you've just completed an 8-12 week strength-focused phase with peaking weeks, testing makes sense. You're already neurally primed for max attempts. The test is the natural conclusion.
2. Powerlifting or strength sport competition
If you compete or plan to, you need to test or have a competition-attempt history. Calibrating your opener, second and third attempts requires real max data.
3. Once or twice per year as a benchmark
Long-term tracking. Once a year, testing your big three (squat, bench, deadlift) gives you a clear data point to compare year over year.
When NOT to test
- Within the first 6 months of training. Form isn't yet locked. Risk of injury or technique breakdown is high. Use estimates instead.
- During hypertrophy or accumulation phases. Volume is high, recovery is depleted. Max attempts will underperform what you're actually capable of.
- When tired, sick, or after poor sleep. 1RM performance can vary 10-15% based on recovery. Testing on a bad day gives you a misleading low number you'll then anchor to.
- Without warm-up. Without a spotter for bench. Without competent form judgment. Skipping any of these turns testing into a lottery.
The estimation alternative
For most use cases — programming percentages, tracking progress, satisfying curiosity — estimating 1RM from a sub-max set is more useful and far safer.
Two well-validated formulas:
- Epley: 1RM = weight × (1 + reps/30)
- Brzycki: 1RM = weight × 36 / (37 − reps)
Both are accurate within 5% for sets of 1-10 reps. Beyond 10 reps, accuracy drops because the test becomes more about muscular endurance than maximal strength.
Worked example: you squat 100 kg for 6 reps at RPE 9 (one rep left in the tank).
- Epley: 100 × (1 + 6/30) = 100 × 1.2 = 120 kg
- Brzycki: 100 × 36 / (37 − 6) = 100 × 1.16 = 116 kg
- Average: ~118 kg estimated 1RM
How to use estimated 1RM in programming
Once you have an estimate, you can prescribe training percentages:
| % of 1RM | Reps possible | Use case |
|---|---|---|
| 95% | 2-3 | Heavy strength work |
| 90% | 4-5 | Strength building |
| 85% | 6-7 | Strength + hypertrophy crossover |
| 80% | 8 | Hypertrophy upper end |
| 75% | 10 | Hypertrophy |
| 70% | 12 | Hypertrophy lower end |
| 65% | 15+ | Endurance, warm-ups |
Why the estimated number is "good enough"
Even a 5% error in your estimated 1RM is small in practical terms. For a 100 kg true 1RM:
- True 1RM: 100 kg → 80% = 80 kg for working sets
- 5% off estimate: 105 kg → 80% = 84 kg for working sets
That 4 kg difference produces almost identical training stimulus. The error doesn't matter at the level you'd actually use it.
The case against frequent 1RM testing
Each true 1RM attempt:
- Costs 5-7 days of recovery before another high-quality session
- Carries elevated injury risk (form often breaks at maximum loads)
- Provides no training stimulus — it's a test, not a workout
- Anchors expectations that may not be repeatable on a different day
For a recreational lifter, testing 1RMs 4-6 times a year is excessive. Once or twice is plenty.
The smart workflow
- Most of your training: program in absolute weights or RPE-based, not percentages.
- For programming with percentages: estimate 1RM from a recent heavy set.
- For curiosity and milestone tracking: actual 1RM test once or twice a year, after a strength block, with proper warm-up and a spotter.
- Never test 1RM during a fat-loss phase, after a missed sleep night, or without a coach for form check if you're new.
The most useful 1RM number is one you've estimated cleanly from a hard set you completed in good form. The least useful is one you grinded out at half-form during a "today's the day" session that left you sore for a week.
FitLife's Tools tab has the 1RM calculator (averaging Epley and Brzycki). Plug in any heavy set and get the estimate.
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