Free ratio calculator
Bench Press to Deadlift Ratio Calculator
Enter a bench press 1RM and Trainnode estimates a balanced deadlift target from the same calculator data used on the free strength ratio calculator.
Quick answer
A balanced Deadlift is about 167% of Bench Press.
Because these lifts come from different movement patterns, this is a broader strength-balance check. In reverse, flat bench press is about 60% of Deadlift. Treat the number as a coaching guideline and use Trainnode's 10% tolerance band to flag lifts that are meaningfully out of line.
Formula
Deadlift 1RM / Bench Press 1RM. Divide Deadlift 1RM by Bench Press 1RM; Trainnode uses 167% as the balanced target for this page.
How to use it
A compact way to compare upper-body pressing against the strongest hinge pattern.
Calculator coverage
Trainnode's free calculator supports 25 common barbell, dumbbell, machine, and weighted bodyweight lifts.
Programming read
Bench Press to Deadlift: cross-pattern balance
flat bench press is a horizontal push lift, while Deadlift is a hip hinge lift. Use this ratio to spot whether one movement pattern is getting ahead of the other before it shows up as stalled programming, compensation, or a client who only looks strong in one part of the profile.
Interactive
Build your own strength ratio profile
This calculator is preconfigured for Bench Press to Deadlift. You can switch anchor lifts, add more supported exercises, change units, or move into bodyweight standards without leaving the page. Need to estimate your 1RM first?
Enter what a client actually lifts (optional) to see whether each lift is balanced, over- or under-developed against the ±10% band. The basis selector adjusts expected targets by movement pattern.
Every lift supported by the free calculator
Trainnode keeps these pages tied to the same supported lift set as the public calculator, so every ratio page reflects what the tool can actually calculate.
Squat pattern
- Back Squat100%
- Front Squat85%
- Box Squat105%
- Hack Squat140%
- Bulgarian Split Squat45%
- Leg Press250%
Hip hinge
- Deadlift125%
- Sumo Deadlift125%
- Trap-Bar Deadlift130%
- Romanian Deadlift95%
- Hip Thrust150%
- Good Morning60%
Horizontal push
- Bench Press75%
- Incline Bench Press67%
- Close-Grip Bench Press70%
- Dumbbell Bench Press60%
- Weighted Dip45%
Vertical push
- Overhead Press50%
- Push Press62%
- Seated DB Shoulder Press40%
Horizontal pull
- Barbell Row66%
- Pendlay Row60%
Vertical pull
- Weighted Pull-Up40%
- Weighted Chin-Up45%
- Lat Pulldown55%
Bench Press to Deadlift FAQ
- What is a good bench press to deadlift ratio?
- A useful balanced target is Deadlift at about 167% of Bench Press. Bench Press is a horizontal push lift and Deadlift is a hip hinge lift, so this ratio is a cross-pattern balance check. Use it as a starting point, then allow for leverage, technique, and training history.
- How do you calculate the bench press to deadlift ratio?
- Divide Deadlift 1RM by Bench Press 1RM. On this page, flat bench press is preselected as the anchor and Deadlift is highlighted as the target.
- What should a coach do if Deadlift is below target?
- Treat it as a programming clue, not a diagnosis. If Deadlift trails the expected target from flat bench press, add more specific exposure to Deadlift, review technique, and check whether fatigue or training history explains the gap.

Questions about strength ratios?
Want to see how Trainnode handles strength ratios for your clients?
I’m a coach too — happy to walk you through how ratio collections, anchor lifts, and automatic imbalance analysis work for a real roster. Book a quick call or message me directly.
Prefer to explore first? See the strength ratios feature.