Horizontal Leg Press Strength Standards Calculator
Under strict Horizontal Leg Press standards, Novice starts around 0.95x bodyweight for men and 0.75x for women, while Elite starts around 2.7x for men and 2.1x for women.
Only strict bilateral seated reps on a horizontal leg press, with a stable hip and back position, repeatable depth, and controlled knee-and-hip extension count toward this standard. Short strokes, bounced turnarounds, hand-assisted pushes, seat changes that alter range, one-leg reps, or substituting a 45-degree sled, hack squat, squat, or leg extension makes the result too loose to compare cleanly. The standard is a supported compound press, not a machine-isolation or free-weight squat score.
Use the calculator to see whether your strict horizontal leg press lands as average, strong, or elite for your bodyweight and how close it is to the next benchmark.
Understanding Your Horizontal Leg Press Strength Score
Your Horizontal Leg Press strength score is Estimated 1RM divided by bodyweight, interpreted through strict bilateral seated horizontal machine leg pressing with the same seat setting, back pad, platform distance, bottom depth, and controlled near-lockout finish. The useful result is the ratio, not the biggest number that can be moved with a shallow bounced press, hip-lift rep, calf press, or bodyweight-plus-stack entry.
The score ranks supported knee-and-hip extension force through a repeatable horizontal machine path. It does not rank 45-degree sled leg press, vertical leg press, hack squat, free squat, single-leg press, calf press, or leg extension, and it does not reward changing the setup once the set gets heavy.
A 200 lb male with a 420 lb Estimated 1RM has a 420 / 200 = 2.10 ratio, which is Advanced. The same estimate at a higher bodyweight would rank lower because the calculator normalizes strength to bodyweight.
For women, a 140 lb lifter with a 231 lb Estimated 1RM has a 1.65 ratio and reaches Advanced. That result means the tested load was strong for her bodyweight only if the same strict setup, range, and load-entry rule were used on every counted rep.
Execution changes the meaning of the badge. A strict rep preserves machine setup consistency, bottom-range depth, hip contact with the pad, knee tracking, controlled return, and avoiding bounce or shallow pulses; a loose rep such as a shallow bounced press, hip-lift rep, calf press, or bodyweight-plus-stack entry turns the entry into a different test and should not be treated as a stronger Horizontal Leg Press score.
Use the result as a repeatable standards test: record bodyweight, load, reps, setup, range, and the exact strictness rule before comparing the next retest.
Horizontal Leg Press Strength Standards
Horizontal Leg Press strength standards convert the Estimated 1RM-to-bodyweight ratio into Beginner, Novice, Intermediate, Advanced, Elite, and Stretch targets. Use the table for your sex, choose the closest bodyweight row, and compare your Estimated 1RM with the listed values.
The lookup tables are useful because selected or loaded bilateral machine resistance scales differently across bodyweights. A fixed 420 lb estimate can be Advanced at 200 lb, while a heavier lifter may need a larger estimate to hold the same tier.
Men’s Horizontal Leg Press Strength Standards
| Bodyweight | Novice | Intermediate | Advanced | Elite | Stretch |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 120 lb | 114 lb | 180 lb | 252 lb | 324 lb | 372 lb |
| 130 lb | 124 lb | 195 lb | 273 lb | 351 lb | 403 lb |
| 140 lb | 133 lb | 210 lb | 294 lb | 378 lb | 434 lb |
| 150 lb | 143 lb | 225 lb | 315 lb | 405 lb | 465 lb |
| 160 lb | 152 lb | 240 lb | 336 lb | 432 lb | 496 lb |
| 170 lb | 162 lb | 255 lb | 357 lb | 459 lb | 527 lb |
| 180 lb | 171 lb | 270 lb | 378 lb | 486 lb | 558 lb |
| 190 lb | 181 lb | 285 lb | 399 lb | 513 lb | 589 lb |
| 200 lb | 190 lb | 300 lb | 420 lb | 540 lb | 620 lb |
| 210 lb | 200 lb | 315 lb | 441 lb | 567 lb | 651 lb |
| 220 lb | 209 lb | 330 lb | 462 lb | 594 lb | 682 lb |
| 230 lb | 219 lb | 345 lb | 483 lb | 621 lb | 713 lb |
| 240 lb | 228 lb | 360 lb | 504 lb | 648 lb | 744 lb |
| 250 lb | 238 lb | 375 lb | 525 lb | 675 lb | 775 lb |
| 260 lb | 247 lb | 390 lb | 546 lb | 702 lb | 806 lb |
Women’s Horizontal Leg Press Strength Standards
| Bodyweight | Novice | Intermediate | Advanced | Elite | Stretch |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 100 lb | 75 lb | 115 lb | 165 lb | 215 lb | 255 lb |
| 110 lb | 83 lb | 127 lb | 182 lb | 237 lb | 281 lb |
| 120 lb | 90 lb | 138 lb | 198 lb | 258 lb | 306 lb |
| 130 lb | 98 lb | 150 lb | 215 lb | 280 lb | 332 lb |
| 140 lb | 105 lb | 161 lb | 231 lb | 301 lb | 357 lb |
| 150 lb | 113 lb | 173 lb | 248 lb | 323 lb | 383 lb |
| 160 lb | 120 lb | 184 lb | 264 lb | 344 lb | 408 lb |
| 170 lb | 128 lb | 196 lb | 281 lb | 366 lb | 434 lb |
| 180 lb | 135 lb | 207 lb | 297 lb | 387 lb | 459 lb |
| 190 lb | 143 lb | 219 lb | 314 lb | 409 lb | 485 lb |
| 200 lb | 150 lb | 230 lb | 330 lb | 430 lb | 510 lb |
| 210 lb | 158 lb | 242 lb | 347 lb | 452 lb | 536 lb |
| 220 lb | 165 lb | 253 lb | 363 lb | 473 lb | 561 lb |
For men, Beginner is below 0.95, Novice begins at 0.95, Intermediate at 1.50, Advanced at 2.10, Elite at 2.70, and Stretch at 3.10x bodyweight. For women, Beginner is below 0.75, Novice begins at 0.75, Intermediate at 1.15, Advanced at 1.65, Elite at 2.15, and Stretch at 2.55x bodyweight.
At 200 lb bodyweight, a male lifter needs about 420 lb Estimated 1RM for Advanced and should view the 540 lb Elite target as the next major jump. At 140 lb bodyweight, a female lifter needs about 231 lb for Advanced and can use the 301 lb Elite target as the next high-end marker.
Tier boundaries are lower-inclusive. A ratio exactly equal to the Advanced or Elite line counts as that higher tier, but only when the load was entered correctly and the rep matched the strict Horizontal Leg Press standard.
How the Horizontal Leg Press Calculator Works
The Horizontal Leg Press calculator estimates 1RM from the entered load and reps, divides that estimate by bodyweight, then compares the ratio with the sex-specific standards. The ratio formula is Estimated 1RM / bodyweight.
The load-entry rule is specific: enter only the selected or loaded machine resistance for both legs together; do not add bodyweight and do not borrow a 45-degree sled number. This is where strict standards interpretation matters because the same physical set can be scored correctly or incorrectly depending on whether the entered load matches the tool convention.
For example, 420 lb Estimated 1RM at 200 lb bodyweight gives 2.10. 378 lb at 180 lb bodyweight also gives 2.10, which shows why the ratio, not the raw load alone, determines the tier.
A lower-inclusive boundary means exact thresholds move up. If the Advanced line is reached exactly, the result is Advanced rather than Intermediate; if the Elite line is reached exactly, it is Elite rather than Advanced.
The calculator should not be used for 45-degree sled leg press, vertical leg press, hack squat, free squat, single-leg press, calf press, or leg extension. Those variations change implement, support, range, leverage, or loading semantics enough that their numbers answer a different question.
Before entering a rep-max set, confirm that every counted rep used the same load convention, setup, range, tempo control, and finish. Stop the count when the set becomes a shallow bounced press, hip-lift rep, calf press, or bodyweight-plus-stack entry.
How to Improve Your Horizontal Leg Press
You improve your Horizontal Leg Press score by increasing Estimated 1RM while keeping the same strict execution standard. The score should rise because supported knee-and-hip extension force through a repeatable horizontal machine path improved, not because the movement became easier to score.
Start by identifying the limiter: machine setup consistency, bottom-range depth, hip contact with the pad, knee tracking, controlled return, and avoiding bounce or shallow pulses. If the rep fails before the target range is reached, train the exact weak position; if the setup changes under load, reduce the load until the standard is repeatable.
A 200 lb male moving from a valid 400 lb estimate to 420 lb reaches the Advanced example line. If the heavier attempt uses a shallow bounced press, hip-lift rep, calf press, or bodyweight-plus-stack entry, the improvement should be rejected and retested under the original standard.
Use if/then decisions. If range shortens, rebuild repeatable depth or top position before adding load. If momentum appears, slow the lowering and use lower-rep sets. If left-right control drifts, pause the rep count and train symmetrical reps at a lighter load.
Progress load, reps, or weekly volume only after the current setup and movement path can be repeated for all counted reps. Retest with the same bodyweight unit, load-entry rule, and strict standard so the next score is comparable.
Elite Horizontal Leg Press Strength Levels
Elite Horizontal Leg Press strength means the lifter has reached the Elite ratio while still performing strict bilateral seated horizontal machine leg pressing with the same seat setting, back pad, platform distance, bottom depth, and controlled near-lockout finish. Elite is not simply the heaviest possible load when a shallow bounced press, hip-lift rep, calf press, or bodyweight-plus-stack entry is allowed.
For the example standards, 540 lb Elite target marks the next major male target at 200 lb bodyweight, while 301 lb Elite target marks the female target at 140 lb. Those loads are meaningful only when enter only the selected or loaded machine resistance for both legs together; do not add bodyweight and do not borrow a 45-degree sled number.
An Elite result shows that supported knee-and-hip extension force through a repeatable horizontal machine path remains strong near the highest standards tiers. The likely constraints become narrower: machine setup consistency, bottom-range depth, hip contact with the pad, knee tracking, controlled return, and avoiding bounce or shallow pulses.
A heavier number should be excluded from Elite interpretation when it comes from a shallow bounced press, hip-lift rep, calf press, or bodyweight-plus-stack entry. That kind of entry may create an impressive ratio, but it no longer describes the same Horizontal Leg Press capability.
Use the Stretch benchmark as a high-end reference, not a separate scored tier. The practical goal is to close the gap toward Stretch without losing the tested setup, range, or control that made the Elite score valid.
Horizontal Leg Press Strength Compared to Other Lifts
Horizontal Leg Press strength should be compared with nearby tools to find what the gap reveals, not to copy one tool’s standards into another. The comparison is useful only when you keep the current tool’s load convention and strict execution identity intact.
The closest comparison usually shares one training quality with Horizontal Leg Press, then changes one major constraint such as support, implement, grip, path, range, or momentum. That changed constraint is what helps diagnose the weak point.
| Comparison lift | Expected relationship | What the gap reveals |
|---|---|---|
| Leg Press (45-degree Sled) | Often loads higher | Sled angle and carriage mechanics change the load path, so a higher sled number does not prove the same horizontal press strength. |
| Machine Hack Squat | Nearby supported quad pattern | The hack squat adds a squat-like path and trunk position, revealing whether machine pressing or squat-pattern depth is limiting. |
| Leg Extension | Much lower isolation ceiling | Leg extension isolates knee extension, while the horizontal press lets hips and glutes contribute to the drive. |
| Front Squat | Lower external load for many users | Free-weight balance and torso position expose bracing limits that the machine removes. |
| Back Squat | Different skill and stability demand | A squat gap shows whether supported pressing strength is outpacing free-weight control. |
| Weighted Step-Up | Lower and more unilateral | Step-ups test single-leg stability and hip control instead of bilateral machine force. |
As a concrete check, compare a 200 lb male at 420 lb Estimated 1RM with the closest related lift rather than copying that number across tools. The 2.10 Horizontal Leg Press ratio keeps its meaning only when the related lift’s different support, path, or load convention is kept separate.
If the related lift is much stronger, ask whether it removes one of the current limiters: machine setup consistency, bottom-range depth, hip contact with the pad, knee tracking, controlled return, and avoiding bounce or shallow pulses. If the related lift is close or lower, the current score may be limited less by the main muscle group and more by setup, path, or strictness.
Use comparison gaps as coaching evidence. A strict Horizontal Leg Press score should not be replaced by 45-degree sled leg press, vertical leg press, hack squat, free squat, single-leg press, calf press, or leg extension, but those tools can show whether the missing quality is raw force, control, range discipline, stability, or movement-specific leverage.
Milestones in Horizontal Leg Press Strength
Horizontal Leg Press milestones are ratio targets that make progress easier to read between full tier changes. They show how much Estimated 1RM is needed at a sample bodyweight when strict execution remains constant.
Men’s Horizontal Leg Press Milestones
| Milestone | Ratio | Example target |
|---|---|---|
| Novice | 0.95x | 171 lb at 180 lb bodyweight |
| Intermediate | 1.5x | 270 lb at 180 lb bodyweight |
| Advanced | 2.1x | 378 lb at 180 lb bodyweight |
| Elite | 2.7x | 486 lb at 180 lb bodyweight |
| Stretch | 3.1x | 558 lb at 180 lb bodyweight |
Women’s Horizontal Leg Press Milestones
| Milestone | Ratio | Example target |
|---|---|---|
| Novice | 0.75x | 105 lb at 140 lb bodyweight |
| Intermediate | 1.15x | 161 lb at 140 lb bodyweight |
| Advanced | 1.65x | 231 lb at 140 lb bodyweight |
| Elite | 2.15x | 301 lb at 140 lb bodyweight |
| Stretch | 2.55x | 357 lb at 140 lb bodyweight |
A 200 lb male at 420 lb is at the Advanced example line; falling 10 to 20 lb short suggests a small strength or execution gap rather than a complete standards mismatch. A 140 lb female at 231 lb reaches the matching Advanced example line under the same lower-inclusive rule.
Milestones should trigger an execution audit. The next ratio should come from stronger strict reps, not from a shallow bounced press, hip-lift rep, calf press, or bodyweight-plus-stack entry. If the setup changed, treat the milestone as unconfirmed.
Retest when you can repeat the current milestone with stable bodyweight, the correct load-entry convention, and no loss of range or control across the set.
Common Horizontal Leg Press Mistakes
Common Horizontal Leg Press mistakes inflate or distort the score by changing load entry, range, setup, momentum, or the movement pattern. The error matters because the calculator can only rank the standard it was designed to measure.
| Mistake | How it inflates the score | Correction |
|---|---|---|
| Adding bodyweight to the machine load | A 300 lb stack plus 180 lb bodyweight becomes a false 480 lb entry. | Enter only selected or loaded machine resistance. |
| Changing seat depth mid-test | Shorter range makes the last 3 reps easier than the first reps. | Lock the setup before the set starts. |
| Hip lift at the bottom | The pelvis leaves the pad and turns depth into lumbar motion. | Stop at the deepest position you can repeat without hip lift. |
| Bottom bounce | Rebound adds machine momentum to a supposed strength rep. | Pause or control the reversal. |
| Calf pressing the platform | Ankle extension replaces knee and hip extension. | Keep foot pressure stable through the whole foot. |
| Counting shallow top-half reps | The estimated 1RM rises from reduced range instead of real strength. | Use the same bottom depth on every rep. |
The most damaging mistake is usually the one that changes the tested identity. A 200 lb lifter can create a stronger-looking ratio by using a shallow bounced press, hip-lift rep, calf press, or bodyweight-plus-stack entry, but that number no longer reflects supported knee-and-hip extension force through a repeatable horizontal machine path.
Load-entry mistakes can be just as misleading. When the rule says enter only the selected or loaded machine resistance for both legs together; do not add bodyweight and do not borrow a 45-degree sled number, entering the wrong convention can double, halve, or otherwise distort the score before technique is even considered.
Audit each set with a simple entry rule: count the rep only if it matches the same setup, path, range, and finish as the first valid rep. Once the movement becomes a different lift, stop counting.
Horizontal Leg Press Form Tips
Correct Horizontal Leg Press form starts with a setup that makes the strict standard repeatable before load is tested. The goal is to make strict bilateral seated horizontal machine leg pressing with the same seat setting, back pad, platform distance, bottom depth, and controlled near-lockout finish look the same from the first rep to the last counted rep.
Set the body and implement position before the first rep, then keep the range consistent. For a valid score, machine setup consistency, bottom-range depth, hip contact with the pad, knee tracking, controlled return, and avoiding bounce or shallow pulses must stay controlled instead of drifting as fatigue builds.
Use a controlled lowering phase because many loose reps begin during the return, not the lift. A fast drop, bounce, or reset can make the next rep easier and turn a strict set into a shallow bounced press, hip-lift rep, calf press, or bodyweight-plus-stack entry.
A practical test is to compare rep 1 with the final counted rep. If the final rep uses a shorter range, different setup, extra momentum, or a different load convention, enter only the reps that still match the original standard.
Form work should protect the score from false inflation. Cleaner reps are not just prettier reps; they preserve the meaning of the bodyweight ratio.
Horizontal Leg Press Training Tips
Train Horizontal Leg Press by choosing the first limiter that breaks the strict standard, then programming directly against it. The training target is not more load at any cost; it is more load while preserving the same score meaning.
Use lower-rep practice when the issue is heavy-position control, and use moderate-rep work when the issue is repeatable range or symmetrical movement. Keep notes on bodyweight, load convention, setup, range, and what ended the set.
For example, a 200 lb male who wants to move from 400 lb to 420 lb should first prove that the lighter load stays strict for multiple exposures. The next test should not rely on a shallow bounced press, hip-lift rep, calf press, or bodyweight-plus-stack entry.
Adjust training by failure pattern. If range shortens, use controlled pauses or slower eccentrics. If setup shifts, practice the same setup before adding load. If discomfort changes the path, reduce load and rebuild a pain-free strict range.
Retest when the target load or rep count can be repeated under the same standard on a normal training day. That keeps progress tied to real Horizontal Leg Press strength rather than a one-off workaround.
Related Strength Standards Tools
Related strength standards tools help place Horizontal Leg Press inside its movement ecosystem without treating other lifts as interchangeable. These comparisons separate horizontal machine pressing from angled sled loading, supported squat machines, isolated knee extension, and free-weight squat patterns.
- Leg Press Use this to compare the horizontal machine result with the closest angled sled leg-press family member. A higher 45-degree sled number may reflect sled angle, carriage mechanics, plate loading, and friction rather than stronger strict horizontal pressing.
- Machine Hack Squat Use this when the question is whether supported quad strength carries into a guided squat path. A gap can reveal whether the horizontal seat and platform are helping more than a squat-like descent and ascent.
- Leg Extension Use this as the isolation boundary. If leg extension is close to the horizontal press, the limiter may be knee-extension strength; if the press is much higher, hip extension and machine bracing are doing meaningful work.
- Front Squat Use this to compare supported machine output with a free-weight quad-dominant squat. A strong press with a weak front squat often points to bracing, balance, or torso-position limits rather than pure leg strength.
Use these links as comparison lenses. The right follow-up tool should explain a gap: whether the current result is limited by raw force, support, implement control, range, grip, body position, or strictness under fatigue.
FAQ
What is a good Horizontal Leg Press score?
A good Horizontal Leg Press score is usually at least Intermediate for your sex and bodyweight, with Advanced showing stronger movement-specific performance. For the examples above, 420 lb at 200 lb bodyweight and 231 lb at 140 lb bodyweight both reach Advanced-level examples when the strict standard is preserved.
How is the Horizontal Leg Press score calculated?
The calculator estimates 1RM from load and reps, then divides that estimate by bodyweight. The critical rule is load entry: enter only the selected or loaded machine resistance for both legs together; do not add bodyweight and do not borrow a 45-degree sled number. If that convention is wrong, the ratio can be wrong even when the reps look strict.
Do exact threshold values count as the higher tier?
Yes. The tier boundaries are lower-inclusive. A ratio exactly equal to the Advanced line counts as Advanced, and a ratio exactly equal to the Elite line counts as Elite, provided the rep matches strict bilateral seated horizontal machine leg pressing with the same seat setting, back pad, platform distance, bottom depth, and controlled near-lockout finish.
Should I enter bodyweight, per-side load, or combined load?
Enter bodyweight only in the bodyweight field and enter load according to this tool’s convention: enter only the selected or loaded machine resistance for both legs together; do not add bodyweight and do not borrow a 45-degree sled number. Do not add bodyweight to the load field unless the tool specifically asks for it, and do not convert another lift’s loading style into this one.
Can I use another exercise’s numbers for this calculator?
No. Do not use 45-degree sled leg press, vertical leg press, hack squat, free squat, single-leg press, calf press, or leg extension as Horizontal Leg Press inputs. Those movements can be useful comparisons, but they change the standard enough that the resulting ratio would describe a different lift.
Why did my tier drop when I gained bodyweight?
The score is Estimated 1RM divided by bodyweight, so the same load becomes a lower ratio at a higher bodyweight. If strength stays at 420 lb while bodyweight rises above 200 lb, the ratio drops even though the absolute load did not.
What should I do with reps that lose the strict standard?
Stop counting when reps become a shallow bounced press, hip-lift rep, calf press, or bodyweight-plus-stack entry. Enter only the reps that still match the original setup, range, control, and load-entry rule, then train the limiter that caused the standard to break.
Can I compare two different horizontal leg press machines?
Compare them cautiously. Seat angle, cable ratio, platform path, stack calibration, and friction can change the effective resistance, so a 360 lb entry on one machine may not equal 360 lb on another. For progress tracking, retest on the same machine with the same seat and foot setup.