Barbell Push Jerk Strength Standards Calculator
Barbell Push Jerk strength standards by bodyweight put a 200 lb man at Advanced around a 228 lb estimated 1RM and Elite around 272 lb. For a 150 lb woman, Advanced starts around 120 lb and Elite around 153 lb, so a strong result means more than getting the bar overhead once.
The lift only compares cleanly when each rep starts from a stable front rack or shoulder position, dips vertically, drives up, reboundsunder the bar, catches without a split, and stands to locked-out control. Push presses, press-outs, split catches, thrusters, and clean-and-jerk entries inflate the number because they remove the no-split catch standard. The push jerk standard lives in that narrow moment where leg drive helps, but the catch still has to be earned overhead.
To learn your max barbell push jerk strength and which strength standard it meets simply enter your information in the calculator below.
Understanding Your Barbell Push Jerk Strength Score
Your Barbell Push Jerk score ranks your estimated 1RM against bodyweight for a rack-start or shoulder-start push jerk with a no-split overhead catch. The calculator is not ranking a push press, a split jerk, a full clean and jerk, or a strict overhead press.
The result starts with estimated 1RM, then divides that number by bodyweight. If a 200 lb man enters a valid 228 lb single, the ratio is 228 / 200 = 1.14. Because the male Advanced threshold starts at 1.14, that exact-boundary result is Advanced.
The ratio matters because a push jerk load means different things at different bodyweights. A 160 lb push jerk is a stronger relative result for a 140 lb lifter than for a 220 lb lifter, even though the barbell load is the same.
The rep standard matters just as much as the math. A lift that turns into a push press, ends with a press-out, lands in a split stance, or never recovers to a balanced standing lockout should not be entered as a Barbell Push Jerk result.
Use the tier as a snapshot of overhead power, timing under the bar, lockout control, and no-split receiving balance. If the score seems low, the limiter may be dip position, vertical drive, speed under the bar, front-rack mobility, or overhead recovery rather than just shoulder strength.
Barbell Push Jerk Strength Standards
Barbell Push Jerk strength standards use estimated 1RM divided by bodyweight, with separate male and female ratio thresholds. The entered load is total straight-bar barbell load, not per-side plate weight and not a clean-and-jerk total.
The tables convert ratio thresholds into estimated 1RM targets. Find your bodyweight row, then compare your estimated 1RM to the Novice, Intermediate, Advanced, Elite, and Stretch columns.
Men’s Barbell Push Jerk Strength Standards
| Bodyweight | Novice | Intermediate | Advanced | Elite | Stretch |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 120 lb | 86 lb | 108 lb | 137 lb | 163 lb+ | 190 lb |
| 130 lb | 94 lb | 117 lb | 148 lb | 177 lb+ | 205 lb |
| 140 lb | 101 lb | 126 lb | 160 lb | 190 lb+ | 221 lb |
| 150 lb | 108 lb | 135 lb | 171 lb | 204 lb+ | 237 lb |
| 160 lb | 115 lb | 144 lb | 182 lb | 218 lb+ | 253 lb |
| 170 lb | 122 lb | 153 lb | 194 lb | 231 lb+ | 269 lb |
| 180 lb | 130 lb | 162 lb | 205 lb | 245 lb+ | 284 lb |
| 190 lb | 137 lb | 171 lb | 217 lb | 258 lb+ | 300 lb |
| 200 lb | 144 lb | 180 lb | 228 lb | 272 lb+ | 316 lb |
| 210 lb | 151 lb | 189 lb | 239 lb | 286 lb+ | 332 lb |
| 220 lb | 158 lb | 198 lb | 251 lb | 299 lb+ | 348 lb |
| 230 lb | 166 lb | 207 lb | 262 lb | 313 lb+ | 363 lb |
| 240 lb | 173 lb | 216 lb | 274 lb | 326 lb+ | 379 lb |
| 250 lb | 180 lb | 225 lb | 285 lb | 340 lb+ | 395 lb |
| 260 lb | 187 lb | 234 lb | 296 lb | 354 lb+ | 411 lb |
Women’s Barbell Push Jerk Strength Standards
| Bodyweight | Novice | Intermediate | Advanced | Elite | Stretch |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 100 lb | 43 lb | 60 lb | 80 lb | 102 lb+ | 120 lb |
| 110 lb | 47 lb | 66 lb | 88 lb | 112 lb+ | 132 lb |
| 120 lb | 52 lb | 72 lb | 96 lb | 122 lb+ | 144 lb |
| 130 lb | 56 lb | 78 lb | 104 lb | 133 lb+ | 156 lb |
| 140 lb | 60 lb | 84 lb | 112 lb | 143 lb+ | 168 lb |
| 150 lb | 65 lb | 90 lb | 120 lb | 153 lb+ | 180 lb |
| 160 lb | 69 lb | 96 lb | 128 lb | 163 lb+ | 192 lb |
| 170 lb | 73 lb | 102 lb | 136 lb | 173 lb+ | 204 lb |
| 180 lb | 77 lb | 108 lb | 144 lb | 184 lb+ | 216 lb |
| 190 lb | 82 lb | 114 lb | 152 lb | 194 lb+ | 228 lb |
| 200 lb | 86 lb | 120 lb | 160 lb | 204 lb+ | 240 lb |
| 210 lb | 90 lb | 126 lb | 168 lb | 214 lb+ | 252 lb |
| 220 lb | 95 lb | 132 lb | 176 lb | 224 lb+ | 264 lb |
A 200 lb man needs about 180 lb estimated 1RM to reach Intermediate, 228 lb for Advanced, 272 lb for Elite, and 316 lb for the stretch benchmark. Those targets come directly from 0.90x, 1.14x, 1.36x, and 1.58x bodyweight.
A 150 lb woman needs about 90 lb estimated 1RM to reach Intermediate, 120 lb for Advanced, 153 lb for Elite, and 180 lb for the stretch benchmark. Those numbers count only when the rep is a true no-split push jerk, not a push press or split jerk.
Tier boundaries are lower-inclusive for the higher tier. A male ratio of exactly 1.14 is Advanced, and a female ratio of exactly 1.02 is Elite.
How the Barbell Push Jerk Calculator Works
The Barbell Push Jerk calculator estimates your 1RM from the barbell load and reps you enter, then divides that estimate by bodyweight. The output is a bodyweight-relative strength tier for the push jerk, not a raw overhead press max or a clean-and-jerk score.
For one-rep entries, the entered load is the estimated 1RM. If a 180 lb man enters a valid 205 lb single, the ratio is 205 / 180 = 1.139, which displays as 1.14x bodyweight and lands at the Advanced boundary.
For multi-rep entries, the runtime uses the shared e1RM helper and then applies the same ratio thresholds. That means rep quality must stay strict across the set; a later rep that becomes a push press or press-out should not be counted.
Use total barbell load in the same unit family as bodyweight. If the bar is loaded to 185 lb total, enter 185 lb, not the per-side plate load and not a cleaned weight from a different lift.
The calculator is most useful when test sets are low-rep, repeatable, and filmed or judged against the same dip, drive, catch, lockout, and recovery standard each time.
How to Improve Your Barbell Push Jerk
Improving your Barbell Push Jerk usually means improving the link that prevents a clean overhead catch: rack position, dip balance, vertical drive, timing under the bar, lockout, or no-split recovery. The tier tells you the outcome; the miss tells you the limiter.
If the bar rolls forward in the rack or the torso tips in the dip, the lift often fails before the drive begins. Front-rack mobility, bracing, and a shorter vertical dip can matter more than adding more shoulder work.
If the bar rises high enough but finishes as a press-out, the limiter is often timing under the bar. A valid push jerk should show a visible rebend and locked-out catch, not a heavy push press that is muscled to completion.
For example, a 200 lb man with a 250 lb estimated 1RM has a 1.25 ratio. That is Advanced, but still short of the 1.36 Elite threshold. If his push press is close to the same load, the next improvement may come from receiving mechanics rather than more dip-drive strength.
Train assistance lifts for the weak piece, but retest the full push jerk under the same no-split standard before trusting that the work transferred.
Elite Barbell Push Jerk Strength Levels
Elite Barbell Push Jerk strength starts at 1.36x bodyweight for men and 1.02x bodyweight for women. The stretch benchmarks are 1.58x for men and 1.20x for women, and they still require a legal no-split catch and recovered overhead finish.
For a 200 lb man, Elite begins around 272 lb estimated 1RM and the stretch benchmark is 316 lb. For a 150 lb woman, Elite begins around 153 lb estimated 1RM and the stretch benchmark is 180 lb.
Elite push jerks usually show more than leg drive. The lifter must keep the dip vertical, drive the bar high, move under it quickly, lock out without pressing out, and recover the catch without stepping into a split.
That is why the push jerk should not be judged like a push press or clean and jerk. Push press strength helps with drive, clean and jerk strength gives full-lift context, and front squat strength supports the rack, but the no-split overhead catch is the defining constraint.
When chasing Elite, protect the standard first. A heavier number that depends on a split catch, press-out, or unstable overhead save is not an Elite Barbell Push Jerk for this tool.
Barbell Push Jerk Strength Compared to Other Lifts
Barbell Push Jerk strength sits between strict pressing, push pressing, and full clean-and-jerk benchmarks because it starts from the shoulders, uses leg drive, and requires a no-split overhead receiving position. It should not be interpreted as the same result as any one related lift.
| Comparison lift | What it isolates | Why it differs from push jerk |
|---|---|---|
| Barbell Push Press | Dip-drive overhead pressing | The push press does not allow a rebend and received overhead catch, so it is usually a lower overhead-power neighbor. |
| Standing Strict Barbell Overhead Press | Pure standing press strength | Strict pressing removes leg drive and receiving mechanics, so it should not cap a valid push jerk result. |
| Barbell Clean And Jerk | Full clean plus jerk performance | The clean and jerk includes the clean and may use split receiving, while this tool scores only the no-split rack-start push jerk. |
| Clean And Press (Barbell) | Clean plus strict press finish | The clean and press is stricter overhead but includes a clean, while the push jerk removes the scored clean and uses a catch. |
| Overhead Squat | Overhead stability through squat depth | The overhead squat is a stability and mobility benchmark, not a jerk-style dip-drive load source. |
| Front Squat | Front-rack leg strength | The front squat can support dip and drive, but it does not test overhead lockout or recovery. |
A 200 lb male lifter with a 228 lb push jerk estimated 1RM is Advanced at 1.14x bodyweight. That same load may be below his front squat, above his strict press, close to his push press, and different from his clean and jerk because each lift changes the constraint.
The best comparison is diagnostic: if the push press is close to the push jerk, receiving mechanics may be limiting; if the front squat is low, leg drive and rack posture may be limiting; if overhead squat control is poor, lockout stability may be the bottleneck.
Milestones in Barbell Push Jerk Strength
Barbell Push Jerk milestones are bodyweight-ratio checkpoints that show when the lift has moved from basic overhead power to repeatable no-split receiving strength. The milestone is not just the bar going overhead; it is the bar being caught, locked, and recovered under the same rules.
| Men’s milestone | Ratio | What it usually means |
|---|---|---|
| Novice | 0.72x | The lifter can use a legal dip-drive and overhead finish beyond beginner loading. |
| Intermediate | 0.90x | The push jerk is coordinated enough that leg drive and lockout are both contributing. |
| Advanced | 1.14x | The lifter can receive challenging loads overhead without turning the rep into a push press or press-out. |
| Elite | 1.36x | The no-split catch, lockout, and recovery are strong under high relative load. |
| Women’s milestone | Ratio | What it usually means |
|---|---|---|
| Novice | 0.43x | The lifter can complete valid push jerk reps with basic rack and overhead control. |
| Intermediate | 0.60x | The dip, drive, and catch are coordinated enough to express meaningful overhead power. |
| Advanced | 0.80x | The lift shows strong no-split receiving balance and repeatable lockout quality. |
| Elite | 1.02x | The push jerk is powerful, stable, and controlled under high relative load. |
If a 150 lb woman improves from a 105 lb estimated 1RM to 120 lb, her ratio rises from 0.70 to 0.80. That moves her from Intermediate to Advanced, and the change usually reflects better timing and overhead recovery as much as raw strength.
Use the next ratio threshold as the milestone, then multiply it by bodyweight to get the estimated 1RM target for your next test.
Common Barbell Push Jerk Mistakes
The most common Barbell Push Jerk mistake is counting push presses as push jerks. If the lifter drives the bar and presses continuously to lockout without a visible rebend and catch, the result belongs in the push press standard instead.
Press-outs are another major inflation source. A valid push jerk reaches lockout through the receiving action; if the elbows rebend and the lifter finishes by pressing the bar out, the rep should not count here.
Split catches also change the lift. A split jerk may be a legitimate overhead lift, but this calculator is calibrated for a no-split push jerk where the receiving balance is bilateral.
Clean-and-jerk and thruster confusion are easy too. The bar may be cleaned to the shoulders before the set, but the clean is not part of the scored rep. Do not enter a full clean-and-jerk result or a front-squat-to-overhead thruster as a Barbell Push Jerk result.
Before entering a set, count only reps that start from a stable rack or shoulder position, dip vertically, drive up, rebend under the bar, catch overhead without a split, lock out, and recover to standing.
Barbell Push Jerk Form Tips
Barbell Push Jerk form should make the bar move up while the lifter moves down into a stable no-split catch. The better the dip and timing, the less the rep turns into a heavy press.
Start with the bar stable on the shoulders or in the front rack, ribs down, feet balanced, and elbows positioned so the bar does not roll forward. A poor rack often turns the dip into a forward shove.
Keep the dip controlled and mostly vertical. A long or forward dip leaks force, shifts the bar path, and makes the catch harder to recover without stepping into a split.
Drive with the legs, then rebend quickly under the bar. The catch should happen with locked elbows, braced trunk, and feet balanced in a no-split stance before standing tall.
Film test sets from the side and front. Look for bar drift, missing rebend, elbow press-out, split-foot catches, and incomplete recovery before trusting the number.
Barbell Push Jerk Training Tips
Barbell Push Jerk training should combine specific push jerk practice with assistance work for the limiter that keeps the catch from being clean. The goal is not simply a bigger dip drive; it is a higher valid estimated 1RM under the no-split standard.
Use singles, doubles, and triples when testing or preparing to retest. Higher-rep work can build capacity, but fatigue often turns later reps into push presses, press-outs, or unstable catches.
Choose assistance work based on the miss. Front squats can help rack posture and leg drive. Push presses can build drive strength. Strict overhead pressing can support lockout. Overhead holds, jerk recoveries, and overhead squat variations can improve receiving confidence and stability.
A practical block might spend 4 to 6 weeks improving one limiter, then retest with 1 to 3 clean push jerk reps. For a 200 lb male lifter, moving from 250 lb to 272 lb estimated 1RM changes the ratio from 1.25 to 1.36, which is the difference between Advanced and Elite.
Train the pieces, but judge progress with the complete push jerk: rack start, dip, drive, rebend, lockout, no-split catch, and recovered standing finish.
Related Strength Standards Tools
Related strength standards help show whether your Barbell Push Jerk is limited by overhead drive, strict pressing strength, front-rack leg strength, overhead stability, or the difference between no-split and full-lift jerk mechanics.
- Barbell Push Press (Raw): compare your push jerk against the closest rack-start overhead drive that does not allow a rebend and overhead catch.
- Standing Strict Barbell Overhead Press: separate strict pressing strength from the leg drive and receiving mechanics used in the push jerk.
- Barbell Clean And Jerk: compare rack-start push jerk strength with a full lift that includes the clean and may use split receiving.
- Clean And Press (Barbell): contrast the push jerk with a clean-to-overhead movement where the finish is a strict press instead of a received jerk.
- Overhead Squat: check whether overhead mobility, lockout, and bracing are limiting the catch and recovery.
- Barbell Front Squat (Raw): see whether front-rack posture and lower-body drive are strong enough to support heavier push jerks.
Use these tools to diagnose the limiting piece, then return to the Barbell Push Jerk calculator to confirm that the improvement shows up in a valid no-split rep.
FAQ
What is a good Barbell Push Jerk?
A good Barbell Push Jerk depends on sex and bodyweight because the calculator ranks estimated 1RM divided by bodyweight. For men, Intermediate begins at 0.90x bodyweight and Advanced begins at 1.14x; for women, Intermediate begins at 0.60x and Advanced begins at 0.80x.
For example, a 200 lb man with a 180 lb estimated 1RM is Intermediate, while the same lifter needs about 228 lb to reach Advanced. The rep must still include a legal dip, drive, no-split catch, lockout, and recovery.
Can I enter my push press result?
No. A push press result should not be entered as a Barbell Push Jerk result because the receiving standard is different. The push press drives and presses the bar to lockout without requiring a rebend under the bar.
If your best push press is 185 lb and your best legal push jerk is 205 lb, enter 205 lb here. If the 205 lb rep finished with a press-out instead of a locked catch, it should not count.
Does a split jerk count as a push jerk?
No. A split jerk does not count for this calculator because the standard requires a no-split receiving position. A split stance changes the balance and recovery demands enough that it belongs in a separate jerk or clean-and-jerk context.
This matters most near upper tiers. A lifter may split jerk more than they can push jerk, but the extra split-stance capacity should not inflate the no-split push jerk score.
Should I include the clean?
No. The clean can be used to get the bar to the shoulders before the test, but it is not part of the scored Barbell Push Jerk rep. Count only the push jerk from the stable front-rack or shoulder-start position.
If you complete a full clean and jerk with 225 lb but your best rack-start no-split push jerk is 205 lb, this calculator should use 205 lb.
How does bodyweight change the Barbell Push Jerk score?
Bodyweight changes the score because the calculator uses estimated 1RM divided by bodyweight. A 180 lb push jerk at 150 lb bodyweight is 1.20x bodyweight, while the same 180 lb push jerk at 220 lb bodyweight is 0.82x bodyweight.
That is why the tables are organized by bodyweight and ratio thresholds rather than one fixed number that counts as strong for everyone.