Sled Pull Strength Standards Calculator
For Sled Pull standards, Novice starts at 0.5x bodyweight for men and 0.35x bodyweight for women, while Elite starts at 1.8x bodyweight for men and 1.45x bodyweight for women for maximum valid added sled load across a fixed 20 meters course.
For this calculator, load means added sled load: the plates or added weight placed on the sled. The result should not be entered as bodyweight, course length, a different implement result, or a combined body-plus-load number. A valid attempt keeps the same sled, setup, lane, surface, start line, finish line, and 20 meters distance.
Run the calculator by entering sex, bodyweight, bodyweight unit, added sled load, and load unit; it will show the standards result, current range, load/bodyweight ratio, and next target load for the same 20 meters test rules.
Understanding Your Score
The Sled Pull calculator scores one thing: the heaviest valid added sled load you can move across a fixed 20 meters course. The distance is not an input and it is not a ranking variable. It is the test boundary that makes one result comparable to another. A lifter who enters 160 lb added sled load and a bodyweight of 200 lb receives a load/bodyweight ratio, a current tier, a tier range, and a next target load for the same 20 meters Sled Pull standard.
The load/bodyweight ratio is the entered added sled load divided by bodyweight after the calculator normalizes pounds and kilograms. A 200 lb lifter moving 160 lb of added sled load has a 0.80x bodyweight result. If that same lifter moves 200 lb, the result is 1.00x bodyweight. The entered load remains the primary snapshot value, because the actual external load is what the athlete tested, while the ratio lets the standards table account for body size.
The current tier is lower-inclusive. Meeting a boundary exactly qualifies for that tier. If the male Novice threshold is 0.5x, a male lifter at exactly 0.5x is Novice, not Beginner. The calculator also shows the next-tier target load and the remaining load gap. That target is the next ratio boundary multiplied by the lifter’s bodyweight, then displayed in the selected load unit.
| Result part | What it means | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Added sled load | The external load entered for the 20 meters test | This is the primary result value and should match the actual implement setup. |
| Load/bodyweight ratio | Added sled load divided by bodyweight | This makes athletes of different body sizes easier to compare. |
| Tier | The highest lower-inclusive threshold reached | It identifies the standards level reached by the valid attempt. |
| Next target load | The load needed for the next boundary | It gives a concrete number for the next standards step. |
Use the same sled, setup, sled lane surface, footwear, start line, finish line, and load-entry convention each time you compare results. Changing any of those conditions changes the test. For Sled Pull, what counts is a valid external load across the full fixed course; what does not count is a shortened lane, outside assistance, changed surface, wrong implement, or an entry that does not match the Added sled load convention.
Standards Tables
These standards are for Sled Pull only. They use 20 meters, added sled load, sex-specific lower-inclusive tier boundaries, and direct load/bodyweight scoring. The public table model is ratio-first so the calculator can turn the ratio into exact target loads for any bodyweight and unit. The examples below show both approved ratios and practical target external loads.
| Sex | Novice | Intermediate | Advanced | Elite | Stretch benchmark |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Men | 0.5x | 0.85x | 1.25x | 1.8x | 2.25x |
| Women | 0.35x | 0.65x | 1x | 1.45x | 1.8x |
| Men bodyweight | Novice target | Intermediate target | Advanced target | Elite target |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 150 lb | 75 lb | 128 lb | 188 lb | 270 lb |
| 180 lb | 90 lb | 153 lb | 225 lb | 324 lb |
| 200 lb | 100 lb | 170 lb | 250 lb | 360 lb |
| 220 lb | 110 lb | 187 lb | 275 lb | 396 lb |
| 250 lb | 125 lb | 213 lb | 313 lb | 450 lb |
| Women bodyweight | Novice target | Intermediate target | Advanced target | Elite target |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 110 lb | 39 lb | 72 lb | 110 lb | 160 lb |
| 130 lb | 46 lb | 85 lb | 130 lb | 189 lb |
| 150 lb | 53 lb | 98 lb | 150 lb | 218 lb |
| 170 lb | 59 lb | 111 lb | 170 lb | 247 lb |
| 190 lb | 67 lb | 124 lb | 190 lb | 276 lb |
| Tier | Men range | Women range | Boundary rule |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beginner | Below 0.5x | Below 0.35x | Below the first listed boundary |
| Novice | 0.5x to below 0.85x | 0.35x to below 0.65x | Meeting 0.5x or 0.35x qualifies |
| Intermediate | 0.85x to below 1.25x | 0.65x to below 1x | Meeting the boundary qualifies |
| Advanced | 1.25x to below 1.8x | 1x to below 1.45x | Meeting the boundary qualifies |
| Elite | 1.8x and above | 1.45x and above | Elite begins at the listed ratio |
Every target in these tables is external load for Sled Pull. Enter the plates or added weight placed on the sled, not a bodyweight number, not a lane length, and not a different exercise. If your setup uses kilograms, enter kilograms and keep bodyweight in either pounds or kilograms; the calculator uses the selected units consistently before it calculates the ratio.
Elite Strength Levels
Elite results require more than a heavy implement. They require the load, lane, surface, start, finish, and movement boundary to stay consistent enough that the result still belongs to Sled Pull. The table separates the official Elite entry point from the stretch benchmark so very strong results can be read without changing the tier system.
| Sex | Elite entry | Stretch benchmark | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Men | 1.8x bodyweight | 2.25x bodyweight | Very high 20 meters Sled Pull strength under the approved Added sled load convention. |
| Women | 1.45x bodyweight | 1.8x bodyweight | Very high 20 meters Sled Pull strength under the approved Added sled load convention. |
An Elite label should not be treated as proof that a different sled family, carry family, or static strength test would score the same way. Sled Pull stays distinct from Sled Push because the athlete pulls rather than pushes the sled. A lifter can be Elite on Sled Pull and still need a separate result for Sled Push, Yoke Walk, Sandbag Carry, or Trap Bar Deadlift because the implement and movement constraints differ.
Elite attempts should be compared only against attempts made on the same measured distance with the same load interpretation. A rough surface, a smoother surface, a high-friction sled, a low-friction sled, or a changed carrying implement can shift the result enough that the number is no longer an apples-to-apples standards entry.
Milestones
Milestones are deterministic next steps, not coaching prescriptions. They show how the next target changes when bodyweight and current load change. The calculator performs this same math for the exact inputs entered by the user.
| Scenario | Current result | Next target example | Remaining load gap |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male, 200 lb bodyweight | 100 lb added sled load | 170 lb for Intermediate | 70 lb |
| Male, 200 lb bodyweight | 170 lb added sled load | 250 lb for Advanced | 80 lb |
| Female, 150 lb bodyweight | 53 lb added sled load | 98 lb for Intermediate | 45 lb |
| Female, 150 lb bodyweight | 150 lb added sled load | 218 lb for Elite | 68 lb |
Next-target examples are most useful when the entered load is close to a boundary. If a lifter is already deep inside a tier, the remaining load gap may be large. That does not change the current tier. It simply means the next lower-inclusive boundary requires a larger external load at the same bodyweight.
Use milestones to read the result, not to change the test. A valid milestone still uses 20 meters, added sled load, the same implement, the same lane, and the same start and finish rules. If a later attempt uses a different movement family, log it under that tool instead of treating it as a Sled Pull milestone.
How The Calculator Works
The calculator collects sex, bodyweight, bodyweight unit, exercise, load, and load unit. The exercise field is fixed to Sled Pull. The fixed distance is displayed as test context and is not editable. The result is produced from added sled load divided by bodyweight, then matched against the appropriate sex-specific standards table.
| Input or output | Calculator use | Reader-facing result |
|---|---|---|
| Sex | Selects the standards threshold table | Men or women standards boundaries |
| Bodyweight | Sets the denominator for the load/bodyweight ratio | Current ratio and next target load |
| Added sled load | Sets the numerator for the score | Primary result value and tier lookup |
| Units | Normalizes bodyweight and load to one internal unit system | Targets shown in the selected load unit |
| Fixed distance | Locks the test to 20 meters | Clear test context for comparison |
| Tier and range | Finds the highest lower-inclusive boundary reached | Current tier, current range, and next target |
If an input is missing, nonpositive, or tied to the wrong exercise, the calculator withholds the result until the test entry is usable. The snapshot preserves the entered load as the primary value. The ratio and tier explain how that load compares with the standards table.
The displayed ratio uses the runtime ratio display helper so a just-below-boundary result does not appear to qualify for the higher tier through rounded-looking text. That matters near thresholds because lower-inclusive boundaries are exact. The visible result should make the same tier decision the calculator made internally.
Testing Rules
The Sled Pull test is valid only when the implement crosses the full 20 meters under the lifter’s unassisted effort and the load entry follows the approved Added sled load convention. Setup, lane, surface, implement, start, finish, and distance all matter. A result from a different lane or implement may still be useful training information, but it should not be mixed into this standards table.
| Setup element | Required rule | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Implement | Use the same sled type for comparable attempts | Different implements can change friction, grip, balance, or body position. |
| Lane and surface | Use the same measured lane and sled lane surface | Surface changes can materially alter the load that moves. |
| Start | The implement begins behind or at the measured start line | The full course must be covered. |
| Finish | The implement crosses the measured finish line | The result belongs to the fixed-distance standard only when the full course is complete. |
| Distance | Keep the course at exactly 20 meters | Shorter or longer courses are different tests. |
| Attempt | Counts? | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Added sled load entered exactly as the plates or added weight placed on the sled | Valid | The load entry matches the approved convention. |
| Same sled, same lane, same surface, full 20 meters | Valid | The test conditions match the standards model. |
| Shortened lane or missed finish line | Invalid | The fixed-distance rule is not satisfied. |
| Outside assistance, supported restart, or changed surface mid-attempt | Invalid | The result no longer represents one comparable unassisted attempt. |
| Wrong implement or wrong load meaning | Invalid | The result belongs to a different tool or a different load convention. |
What counts is a clean, comparable result under the approved movement boundary. What does not count is a result made easier by shortening the distance, changing the surface, changing the implement, using assistance, or entering a load that does not mean added sled load. Retest consistency matters more than chasing a number from an easier setup.
Related Tools
These related tools help place Sled Pull inside the loaded-distance family without turning this page into a comparison article. Each one is related because it shares fixed-distance load, sled/carry context, or a strength anchor, but each one has a different constraint that should be tested separately.
Sled Push
Sled Push is related because it sits near Sled Pull in the loaded-distance or adjacent strength map. Use it when the question changes from this exact 20 meters added sled load test to loaded-distance sled-family benchmark. The key difference is that Sled Push has a different implement, direction, or load-entry rule, while Sled Pull uses added sled load over 20 meters.
Sandbag Carry
Sandbag Carry is related because it sits near Sled Pull in the loaded-distance or adjacent strength map. Use it when the question changes from this exact 20 meters added sled load test to loaded-distance or adjacent strength anchor. The key difference is that Sandbag Carry has a different implement, direction, or load-entry rule, while Sled Pull uses added sled load over 20 meters.
Farmer’s Walk
Farmer’s Walk is related because it sits near Sled Pull in the loaded-distance or adjacent strength map. Use it when the question changes from this exact 20 meters added sled load test to loaded-distance or adjacent strength anchor. The key difference is that Farmer’s Walk has a different implement, direction, or load-entry rule, while Sled Pull uses added sled load over 20 meters.
Trap Bar Deadlift
Trap Bar Deadlift is related because it sits near Sled Pull in the loaded-distance or adjacent strength map. Use it when the question changes from this exact 20 meters added sled load test to loaded-distance or adjacent strength anchor. The key difference is that Trap Bar Deadlift has a different implement, direction, or load-entry rule, while Sled Pull uses added sled load over 20 meters.
Back Squat
Back Squat is related because it sits near Sled Pull in the loaded-distance or adjacent strength map. Use it when the question changes from this exact 20 meters added sled load test to loaded-distance or adjacent strength anchor. The key difference is that Back Squat has a different implement, direction, or load-entry rule, while Sled Pull uses added sled load over 20 meters.
Related tools should clarify boundaries. Sled family entries can look similar at first glance, but direction, attachment, body position, implement friction, and load meaning change the standards result. Carry tools are also nearby, but a hand-held or shoulder-supported carry is not the same test as Sled Pull unless the spec names the same implement and load rule.
Frequently Asked Questions
What number should I enter for load?
Enter added sled load. For this tool, that means the plates or added weight placed on the sled. Do not enter bodyweight, lane length, a different exercise result, or a number from a mismatched setup.
Why is the distance fixed at 20 meters?
The fixed distance is the comparison boundary. The standards table assumes the implement crosses the full 20 meters course, so the calculator keeps distance as read-only test context.
How does bodyweight affect the result?
Bodyweight is used to calculate the load/bodyweight ratio. The entered load remains the primary result value, while the ratio determines the tier and next target load.
Can I use pounds for load and kilograms for bodyweight?
Yes. Select the correct unit for each input. The calculator normalizes the selected units before calculating the ratio and then displays the next target load in the chosen load unit.
What makes an attempt valid?
A valid attempt uses the approved sled, the same lane and surface, the exact 20 meters course, the correct Added sled load convention, and an unassisted finish across the line.
What does not count?
A shortened lane, wrong implement, changed surface, outside assistance, supported restart, missed finish, or wrong load meaning does not count for this standards table.
Why does my result show a next target load?
The next target load is the next lower-inclusive ratio boundary multiplied by your bodyweight. It shows the external load needed to reach the next tier under the same test rules.
How should I retest?
Retest on the same measured course with the same implement, load-entry rule, surface, footwear, start line, and finish line. That keeps the comparison tied to Sled Pull rather than a changed test.
Why can two similar setups produce different standards results?
Loaded-distance standards are sensitive to friction, surface, implement shape, attachment height, and how the external load is counted. Two setups can feel similar but belong to different standards records if one uses a different lane, different implement, or different load meaning. Keep the comparison inside this 20 meters Sled Pull convention when you want the calculator result to stay aligned with the tables above.
What should I record with the result?
Record the entered load, bodyweight, units, implement, lane surface, start line, finish line, footwear, and any attachment detail that affects the attempt. Those notes make a later retest easier to compare because the calculator can only score the numbers you enter; it cannot know whether the sled, trap bar, lane, or surface changed unless you keep that context with the result.