One Arm Pull Up To Weighted Pull Up Conversion Calculator
This One Arm Pull Up to Weighted Pull Up calculator estimates Weighted Pull Up strength from One Arm Pull Up performance.
Enter your sex, bodyweight, and One Arm Pull Up performance to see your Weighted Pull Up estimate, expected range, strength tier, and ratio to bodyweight.
The calculator uses the conversion model for this tool to translate One Arm Pull Up performance into the Weighted Pull Up estimate. Use the result as a planning estimate, not a guaranteed max or attempt recommendation.
What Your One-Arm Pull-Ups Say About Your Weighted Pull-Up
Strict weaker-side One-Arm Pull-Up reps can estimate Weighted Pull-Up external added-load strength when sex, age, bodyweight band, and bodyweight are included.
An 80 kg male under 30 in the middle bodyweight band completing 8 strict weaker-side reps gets a 64.0 kg added-load prediction, with a 54.4-73.6 kg range and an Elite total-resistance classification.
| Source test | Resolved profile | Added-load ratio | Center added load | Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 80 kg male, under 30, 8 reps | Middle band | 0.80x | 64.0 kg | 54.4-73.6 kg |
| 60 kg female, under 30, 7 reps | Middle band | 0.80x | 48.0 kg | 40.8-55.2 kg |
| 80 kg male, under 30, 10 reps | Middle stretch | 0.90x | 72.0 kg | 61.2-82.8 kg |
The result is an estimate, not a guaranteed max. Arm asymmetry, body proportions, rotation control, grip, loading attachment, and Weighted Pull-Up practice can shift the direct result.
How the One-Arm Pull-Up to Weighted Pull-Up Conversion Works
The calculator first resolves One-Arm Pull-Up rep anchors from sex, bodyweight band, and age. It then interpolates the external-added-load ratio attached to those anchors.
- Male ratios: novice through stretch anchors map to 0.10, 0.30, 0.50, 0.75, and 0.90 times bodyweight added load.
- Female ratios: novice through stretch anchors map to 0.05, 0.25, 0.45, 0.65, and 0.80 times bodyweight added load.
- Age: base rep anchors use multipliers from 1.00 under age 30 to 0.50 at age 60-plus, then remain strictly increasing.
- Range: predicted added load x 0.85 to x 1.15.
Classification adds bodyweight back to the predicted external load and compares the total-resistance ratio with Weighted Pull-Up standards.
How Accurate Is This One-Arm Pull-Up Estimate?
The estimate is most useful when the weaker side is reported and every rep travels from a one-arm dead hang to chin above the bar.
The 15% range acknowledges that one-side pulling and two-arm weighted pulling require different rotation control, symmetry, grip loading, and target skill.
| Condition | Likely effect | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Weaker side and full range used | Better comparison | The source test stays consistent |
| Free hand touches bar or arm | Estimate can run high | Assistance changes the source demand |
| Stronger side reported | Estimate can run high | Asymmetry is hidden |
| Little weighted practice | Direct target can run low | Loading setup and two-arm skill still matter |
Validate the range with normal progressive Weighted Pull-Up training rather than treating the center as an attempt.
Why One-Arm Pull-Up Strength Does Not Match Weighted Pull-Up
Both are closed-chain vertical pulls, but One-Arm Pull-Ups concentrate the task on one side while Weighted Pull-Ups distribute total resistance through both arms.
| Factor | One-Arm Pull-Up | Weighted Pull-Up |
|---|---|---|
| Working arms | One arm, weaker side scored | Two arms |
| External load | None | Added weight plus bodyweight |
| Stability | High rotation-control demand | More symmetrical pulling |
| Classification | Rep-based source | Total-resistance ratio target |
Loading attachment, grip, limb lengths, shoulder-blade control, and training specificity can create a real gap between the two tests.
What Counts as a Strict One-Arm Pull-Up Input
Report the weaker-side count from one continuous bodyweight-only set on a fixed bar.
| Rule | Valid | Invalid |
|---|---|---|
| Working arm | One arm; weaker side reported | Stronger-side-only count |
| Start | One-arm dead hang at full extension | Shortened bottom range |
| Finish | Chin clearly above bar | Partial finish |
| Free hand | No contact or support | Touches bar, arm, wrist, or forearm |
| Reps | 1-15 strict integers | Archer, typewriter, ring, assisted, weighted, kipped, or rest-pause reps |
Stop counting as soon as the free hand assists, the body uses momentum, or range shortens.
One-Arm Pull-Up Estimate vs Weighted Pull-Up Standards
The displayed tier belongs only to the predicted Weighted Pull-Up result.
The calculator displays external added load, but classification uses total resistance: bodyweight plus predicted added load, divided by bodyweight.
For the 80 kg male example at 64 kg added load, the total-resistance ratio is 1.80. That clears the male Elite threshold even though the external-load ratio alone is 0.80.
Use the source standards page for One-Arm Pull-Up reps and the Weighted Pull-Up standards page for a direct target set.
How to Improve Weighted Pull-Up Transfer From One-Arm Pull-Ups
Keep weaker-side reps strict while practicing two-arm weighted loading directly.
| Observed gap | Likely limiter | Action |
|---|---|---|
| One-arm reps rise, weighted load stalls | Target setup or two-arm skill | Practice controlled weighted sets |
| Weighted load exceeds center | Strong target-specific skill | Keep one-arm work for one-side control |
| Free hand starts assisting | Source strength has ended | Stop the scored set earlier |
| Body rotates sharply | Rotation control breaks down | Reduce reps and restore strict form |
Use recent target training—not the conversion alone—to choose working loads.
When to Use This One-Arm Pull-Up Conversion Calculator
Use it when you have a recent strict weaker-side One-Arm Pull-Up set and want a Weighted Pull-Up added-load planning range.
| Use it when | Do not use it when |
|---|---|
| Sex, age, bodyweight, and weaker-side reps are known | The stronger side is the only count |
| Every rep used one arm and full range | The free hand or momentum assisted |
| You want an added-load range | You need a max-attempt recommendation |
| You can validate with weighted training | The source set used archer, ring, machine, or added weight |
The center is a starting estimate, not a prescription.
Related Strength Tools
Use these tools to classify the source, validate the target, and compare nearby Pull-Up demands.
- One Arm Pull Up Strength Standards classifies the weaker-side source test.
- Weighted Pull-Up Strength Standards validates an actual target set.
- Strict Pull-Ups Strength Standards compares standard two-arm bodyweight reps.
- Archer Pull-Ups Strength Standards compares an offset bodyweight Pull-Up variation.
When a direct Weighted Pull-Up set conflicts with the estimate, trust the direct target test.
One Arm Pull Up to Weighted Pull Up FAQs
Which side should I enter?
Enter the weaker-side repetition count.
Can my free hand touch the working arm?
No. Any free-hand contact changes the source test.
Why is age required?
Age adjusts the canonical source rep anchors before interpolation.
Why does bodyweight band matter?
The source rep anchors differ for light, middle, and heavy bodyweight bands.
Is the predicted value total resistance?
No. The displayed value is external added load; classification adds bodyweight back.
Can I enter weighted or archer reps?
No. Use only strict bodyweight One-Arm Pull-Ups with one working arm.
Should I attempt the center prediction?
No. Treat it as a planning estimate and validate it through progressive target training.