Strict Pull-Ups To Lat Pulldown Conversion Calculator
This Strict Pull-Ups to Lat Pulldown calculator estimates Lat Pulldown strength from Strict Pull-Ups performance.
Enter your sex, bodyweight, and Strict Pull-Ups performance to see your Lat Pulldown estimate, expected range, strength tier, and ratio to bodyweight.
The calculator uses the conversion model for this tool to translate Strict Pull-Ups performance into the Lat Pulldown estimate. Use the result as a planning estimate, not a guaranteed max or attempt recommendation.
What Your Strict Pull-Ups Say About Your Lat Pulldown
Strict pronated-grip Pull-Ups can estimate Lat Pulldown strength when bodyweight and completed reps are considered together.
An 80 kg male completing 8 strict reps gets a 72.0 kg center Lat Pulldown prediction, with a 61.2-82.8 kg range and an Intermediate target classification.
| Strict Pull-Up test | Profile | Target ratio | Center Lat Pulldown | Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 80 kg bodyweight x 8 | Male | 0.90x | 72.0 kg | 61.2-82.8 kg |
| 60 kg bodyweight x 7 | Female | 0.95x | 57.0 kg | 48.5-65.6 kg |
| 80 kg bodyweight x 13 | Male | 1.20x | 96.0 kg | 81.6-110.4 kg |
The result is an estimate, not a guaranteed max. Grip width, body proportions, rep endurance, machine geometry, thigh-pad setup, and Lat Pulldown practice can shift the direct result.
How the Strict Pull-Up to Lat Pulldown Conversion Works
The calculator selects a sex-specific Lat Pulldown-to-bodyweight ratio from strict Pull-Up rep anchors, interpolating between anchors when the rep count falls between them.
- Male anchors: 1, 4, 8, 13, 18, and 23 reps map to 0.45, 0.60, 0.90, 1.20, 1.50, and 1.75 times bodyweight.
- Female anchors: 1, 2, 4, 7, 10, and 12 reps map to 0.35, 0.45, 0.70, 0.95, 1.20, and 1.35 times bodyweight.
- Center: bodyweight in kg x interpolated ratio.
- Range: center x 0.85 to center x 1.15.
Inputs above the final sex-specific anchor keep the final ratio rather than extending the curve. The predicted target—not the Pull-Up rep count—is classified against Lat Pulldown standards.
How Accurate Is This Strict Pull-Up Estimate?
The estimate is most useful when every Pull-Up begins from a dead hang and finishes with the chin clearly above the bar.
The 15% range allows for meaningful differences between moving the body around a fixed bar and moving a machine stack while seated.
| Condition | Likely effect | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Full dead hang and chin-over-bar finish | Better comparison | The source standard stays consistent |
| Kip, swing, or shortened range | Estimate can run high | Invalid reps inflate the source count |
| Different Pulldown machine | Direct result can differ | Stack labels and pulley geometry vary |
| Little Pulldown practice | Direct result can run low | Machine setup and skill still matter |
Validate the estimate on the same Lat Pulldown machine and setup you plan to track.
Why Strict Pull-Up Strength Does Not Match Lat Pulldown
Both exercises use vertical pulling strength, but Pull-Ups move the body around a fixed bar while Lat Pulldown moves an external machine load toward a supported body.
| Factor | Strict Pull-Up | Lat Pulldown |
|---|---|---|
| Resistance | Bodyweight | Displayed machine load |
| Support | Free-hanging body | Seat and thigh pads |
| Valid finish | Chin above bar | Bar pulled through the machine’s strict range |
| Stability | Whole-body control | Machine-guided cable path |
Grip width, limb lengths, shoulder-blade control, upper-body angle, and training specificity can create a real gap between the two tests.
What Counts as a Strict Pull-Up Input
Use bodyweight-only Pull-Ups on a fixed straight bar with a pronated grip. Complete one continuous set without releasing the bar.
| Rule | Valid | Invalid |
|---|---|---|
| Start | Dead hang with full elbow extension | Shortened bottom range |
| Finish | Chin clearly above bar | Chin below or level with bar |
| Grip | Pronated grip on fixed bar | Chin-up, neutral, ring, or machine grip |
| Assistance | Bodyweight only | Band, counterweight, foot, kip, or swing |
| Reps | 1-25 completed integers | Failed, partial, or rest-pause reps |
Stop counting as soon as range or control changes. Do not enter weighted or assisted Pull-Up reps.
Strict Pull-Up Estimate vs Lat Pulldown Standards
The displayed strength tier belongs only to the predicted Lat Pulldown 1RM.
For an 80 kg male at 8 reps, the 72 kg prediction is 0.90 times bodyweight. That exact ratio enters the Intermediate Lat Pulldown tier even though the source Pull-Up system uses rep-based standards.
Use the Strict Pull-Up standards page to classify the source and the Lat Pulldown standards page to validate an actual machine set.
How to Improve Lat Pulldown Transfer From Strict Pull-Ups
Keep Pull-Up reps strict while practicing the target machine setup directly.
| Observed gap | Likely limiter | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Pull-Up reps rise, Pulldown stalls | Machine setup or target skill | Practice strict Pulldown sets |
| Pulldown exceeds center | Strong machine-specific skill | Keep Pull-Ups as body-control work |
| Later Pull-Ups shorten | Source rep quality breaks down | Stop the scored set earlier |
| Body swings | Momentum replaces strict pulling | Reduce reps and restore control |
Use recent target training—not the conversion alone—to choose working weights.
When to Use This Strict Pull-Up Conversion Calculator
Use it when you have a recent strict bodyweight Pull-Up set and want a Lat Pulldown planning range.
| Use it when | Do not use it when |
|---|---|
| Bodyweight and strict reps are known | The set used added weight or assistance |
| Every rep used full range | The set used kip, swing, or partial reps |
| You want a comparison range | You need a max-attempt recommendation |
| You can validate on one machine | You expect identical stacks across machines |
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 vertical pulls.
- Strict Pull-Ups Strength Standards classifies the bodyweight source test.
- Lat Pulldown Strength Standards validates an actual target set.
- Weighted Pull-Up Strength Standards classifies externally loaded Pull-Ups.
- Wide Grip Lat Pulldown Strength Standards compares a nearby pronated-grip machine variation.
When a direct strict Lat Pulldown result conflicts with the estimate, trust the direct target test.
Strict Pull-Ups to Lat Pulldown FAQs
Can I use chin-ups or neutral-grip reps?
No. Use only pronated-grip Pull-Ups on a fixed bar.
Can I enter weighted Pull-Ups?
No. This model uses bodyweight and strict bodyweight reps only.
What happens above the final anchor?
The calculator keeps the final sex-specific ratio instead of extrapolating beyond the approved curve.
Why does bodyweight matter?
The target load is calculated as an interpolated ratio of bodyweight.
Does the tier rank my Pull-Ups?
No. It classifies only the predicted Lat Pulldown result.
Will every Pulldown machine match?
No. Stack calibration, pulley geometry, seat setup, and thigh pads can change the direct load.
Should I attempt the center prediction?
No. Use it as a planning estimate and validate it through normal target training.