
Compare Your OHP by Body Weight & Training Experience
The overhead press (also called shoulder press or military press) is one of the most challenging upper body lifts and a true test of pressing strength. Unlike the bench press where you're supported by a bench, the overhead press requires you to stabilize your entire body while pressing weight directly overhead, making it significantly harder pound-for-pound.
Overhead press strength standards help you assess your current pressing ability, set realistic goals, and track progress over time. These benchmarks are based on one-rep max (1RM) performance relative to body weight, categorized by training experience from beginner to elite levels.
Why OHP Standards Matter: The overhead press is the least forgiving of the major lifts—you can't "cheat" with momentum or poor form like other exercises. Your OHP numbers provide an honest assessment of shoulder strength, core stability, and overall pressing power. Most people can overhead press about 60-70% of what they bench press.
Here's what each experience level represents:
Strength standards for men by body weight and training experience. Values represent one-rep max (1RM) in pounds.
| Body Weight | Beginner | Novice | Intermediate | Advanced | Elite |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 120 lbs (54 kg) | 50 lbs | 65 lbs | 90 lbs | 120 lbs | 150 lbs |
| 130 lbs (59 kg) | 55 lbs | 75 lbs | 100 lbs | 130 lbs | 165 lbs |
| 140 lbs (64 kg) | 60 lbs | 80 lbs | 110 lbs | 145 lbs | 180 lbs |
| 150 lbs (68 kg) | 65 lbs | 85 lbs | 115 lbs | 155 lbs | 190 lbs |
| 160 lbs (73 kg) | 70 lbs | 90 lbs | 125 lbs | 165 lbs | 205 lbs |
| 170 lbs (77 kg) | 75 lbs | 95 lbs | 130 lbs | 175 lbs | 215 lbs |
| 180 lbs (82 kg) | 80 lbs | 100 lbs | 140 lbs | 185 lbs | 230 lbs |
| 190 lbs (86 kg) | 85 lbs | 110 lbs | 150 lbs | 195 lbs | 245 lbs |
| 200 lbs (91 kg) | 90 lbs | 115 lbs | 155 lbs | 205 lbs | 255 lbs |
| 210 lbs (95 kg) | 95 lbs | 120 lbs | 165 lbs | 215 lbs | 270 lbs |
| 220 lbs (100 kg) | 100 lbs | 125 lbs | 170 lbs | 225 lbs | 280 lbs |
| 230 lbs (104 kg) | 105 lbs | 130 lbs | 180 lbs | 235 lbs | 295 lbs |
| 240 lbs (109 kg) | 110 lbs | 135 lbs | 185 lbs | 245 lbs | 305 lbs |
| 250 lbs (113 kg) | 115 lbs | 140 lbs | 195 lbs | 255 lbs | 320 lbs |
Alternative way to assess your overhead press strength:
| Level | Ratio (1RM ÷ Bodyweight) | Example (180 lb lifter) |
|---|---|---|
| Beginner | 0.40x bodyweight | 72 lbs |
| Novice | 0.55x bodyweight | 99 lbs |
| Intermediate | 0.75x bodyweight | 135 lbs |
| Advanced | 1.0x bodyweight | 180 lbs |
| Elite | 1.25x+ bodyweight | 225+ lbs |
The Bodyweight OHP Milestone: Pressing your bodyweight overhead (1.0x ratio) is considered an advanced achievement that only about 5-10% of male lifters reach. This requires years of consistent training and represents excellent shoulder strength. The intermediate milestone of 0.75x bodyweight (135 lbs for 180 lb lifter) is a realistic goal for most dedicated lifters within 2-3 years.
Strength standards for women by body weight and training experience. Values represent one-rep max (1RM) in pounds.
| Body Weight | Beginner | Novice | Intermediate | Advanced | Elite |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 100 lbs (45 kg) | 25 lbs | 35 lbs | 50 lbs | 70 lbs | 90 lbs |
| 110 lbs (50 kg) | 30 lbs | 40 lbs | 55 lbs | 75 lbs | 100 lbs |
| 120 lbs (54 kg) | 35 lbs | 45 lbs | 60 lbs | 85 lbs | 110 lbs |
| 130 lbs (59 kg) | 35 lbs | 50 lbs | 70 lbs | 95 lbs | 120 lbs |
| 140 lbs (64 kg) | 40 lbs | 55 lbs | 75 lbs | 100 lbs | 130 lbs |
| 150 lbs (68 kg) | 45 lbs | 60 lbs | 80 lbs | 110 lbs | 140 lbs |
| 160 lbs (73 kg) | 50 lbs | 65 lbs | 85 lbs | 115 lbs | 150 lbs |
| 170 lbs (77 kg) | 50 lbs | 70 lbs | 95 lbs | 125 lbs | 160 lbs |
| 180 lbs (82 kg) | 55 lbs | 75 lbs | 100 lbs | 135 lbs | 170 lbs |
| 190 lbs (86 kg) | 60 lbs | 80 lbs | 105 lbs | 140 lbs | 180 lbs |
| 200 lbs (91 kg) | 65 lbs | 85 lbs | 110 lbs | 150 lbs | 190 lbs |
| Level | Ratio (1RM ÷ Bodyweight) | Example (140 lb lifter) |
|---|---|---|
| Beginner | 0.30x bodyweight | 42 lbs |
| Novice | 0.40x bodyweight | 56 lbs |
| Intermediate | 0.55x bodyweight | 77 lbs |
| Advanced | 0.75x bodyweight | 105 lbs |
| Elite | 0.95x+ bodyweight | 133+ lbs |
Female Upper Body Strength: Women typically have 40-60% of male upper body strength due to hormonal and structural differences, but can achieve impressive overhead press numbers with consistent training. The intermediate level (0.55x bodyweight) represents strong shoulder development, while advanced (0.75x) places women in the top 10% of female lifters. Elite female lifters approaching bodyweight overhead press are exceptionally rare and strong.
Realistic timeframes for reaching each strength level with consistent training, assuming you start as a true beginner and follow proper programming.
| From → To | Typical Timeframe | Training Frequency | Expected Progress Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beginner → Novice | 3-6 months | 2-3x per week | Add 2.5-5 lbs per week (linear progression) |
| Novice → Intermediate | 6-12 months | 2-3x per week | Add 2.5-5 lbs per 2-3 weeks (weekly progression) |
| Intermediate → Advanced | 1-3 years | 2-3x per week | Add 2.5-5 lbs per month (monthly progression) |
| Advanced → Elite | 2-5+ years | 2-4x per week | Add 2.5-5 lbs per 3-6 months (very slow gains) |
The 5-Year Reality: Reaching advanced level (bodyweight OHP for men, 0.75x for women) typically takes 3-5 years of consistent, intelligent training. Elite level may take 7-10+ years. Be patient—overhead press is the slowest progressing major lift. Adding just 5 lbs to your OHP max every 2-3 months at intermediate+ level is excellent progress.
Correct form is essential for maximizing strength, preventing injury, and ensuring your lifts count toward these standards.
| Error | Problem | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Excessive Back Arch | Turns OHP into incline press, strains lower back | Squeeze glutes hard, brace core, keep ribs down |
| Pressing Around Head | Inefficient bar path, reduced power | Press straight up, move head back then push through |
| Elbows Flared Too Wide | Reduces power, increases shoulder injury risk | Keep elbows at 45° angle, wrists over elbows |
| Using Leg Drive | Turns strict press into push press | Keep knees locked, no dip or bounce |
| Weak Lockout | Doesn't count as complete rep | Press until arms fully extended, shrug shoulders up |
| Dropping Bar Too Fast | Loses tension, increases injury risk | Control descent, maintain core brace throughout |
Strict vs Push Press: These standards apply to strict overhead press only—no leg drive, bounce, or excessive back lean. Push press (using leg drive) allows 10-20% more weight but doesn't count toward these benchmarks. Push press is a valid exercise but measures different qualities (explosive power vs pure pressing strength).
Evidence-based strategies to increase your overhead press strength systematically.
How often you should train overhead press depends on your level:
| Experience Level | Frequency | Volume per Week | Intensity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beginner | 2-3x per week | 6-12 total sets | Focus on form, moderate weight (60-75% 1RM) |
| Novice/Intermediate | 2-3x per week | 8-15 total sets | Mix of heavy (80-90%) and volume work (65-75%) |
| Advanced/Elite | 2-4x per week | 10-20 total sets | Periodized, varying intensity and volume |
Build overhead press strength with these supporting movements:
| Day | Exercise | Sets × Reps | Intensity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monday (Heavy) | Barbell OHP | 5 × 3-5 | 85-90% 1RM |
| Incline Bench Press | 4 × 6-8 | 75-80% 1RM | |
| Dumbbell Lateral Raise | 3 × 12-15 | Moderate | |
| Face Pulls | 3 × 15-20 | Light-Moderate | |
| Thursday (Volume) | Barbell OHP | 4 × 8-10 | 65-75% 1RM |
| Dumbbell Shoulder Press | 3 × 10-12 | Moderate | |
| Overhead Tricep Extension | 3 × 10-12 | Moderate | |
| Rear Delt Fly | 3 × 12-15 | Light-Moderate |
The overhead press is notorious for plateauing. Here's how to break through sticking points.
Cause: Psychological barrier, insufficient volume, poor technique
Solutions:
Cause: Weak front delts, poor starting position, insufficient leg drive (or suppressing it too much)
Solutions:
Cause: Weak triceps, insufficient shoulder elevation, poor positioning at top
Solutions:
Cause: Accumulated fatigue, insufficient recovery, lack of periodization, nutritional deficiency
Solutions:
The 5 lb Reality: At intermediate+ levels, adding 5 lbs to your max overhead press can take 2-3 months of consistent training. This is normal and expected. The OHP progresses slower than any other major lift. Celebrate small victories—a 2.5 lb increase or adding 1 rep to your top set represents real progress.
How overhead press typically compares to other major lifts for most people.
| Lift Comparison | Typical Ratio | Example (if OHP = 135 lbs) |
|---|---|---|
| OHP to Bench Press | 60-70% of bench | Bench: 195-225 lbs |
| OHP to Squat | 40-50% of squat | Squat: 270-340 lbs |
| OHP to Deadlift | 35-45% of deadlift | Deadlift: 300-385 lbs |
| OHP to Incline Bench | 70-80% of incline | Incline: 169-193 lbs |
| OHP to Push Press | 80-90% of push press | Push Press: 150-169 lbs |
A "good" overhead press depends on experience level. For men: beginners should aim for 0.40x bodyweight, intermediate lifters 0.75x, and advanced lifters 1.0x bodyweight. For women: beginners 0.30x bodyweight, intermediate 0.55x, and advanced 0.75x. For example, a 180 lb man pressing 135 lbs (0.75x bodyweight) represents solid intermediate strength achievable with 2-3 years consistent training. Use the detailed tables above to find your specific bodyweight and goal.
Yes, extremely impressive! For men, a bodyweight overhead press (1.0x ratio) represents advanced level strength achieved by only 5-10% of trained lifters. This typically requires 3-5+ years of consistent, intelligent training. For women, pressing 0.75x bodyweight is similarly impressive and represents advanced strength. Elite lifters (1.25x+ for men, 0.95x+ for women) are exceptionally rare. If you can strict press your bodyweight, you have elite shoulder strength relative to the general gym population.
This is completely normal! Most people overhead press 60-70% of what they bench press. OHP is harder because: (1) you're pressing against gravity with no bench support, (2) it uses smaller muscle groups (delts vs pecs), (3) requires full-body stability, (4) has a longer range of motion, and (5) offers less mechanical advantage. If your OHP is below 50% of your bench, you may benefit from increasing shoulder training frequency and volume. If it's 60-70%, your ratios are normal and balanced.
Most people should train overhead press 2-3 times per week for optimal progress. Beginners can handle 3x weekly with full-body programs. Intermediates typically do well with 2-3x weekly using a mix of heavy and volume days. Advanced lifters may benefit from 3-4x weekly with varied intensities and variations. Allow 48-72 hours between heavy pressing sessions for recovery. The key is weekly volume (aim for 10-15 total working sets across all sessions) rather than just frequency. Quality beats quantity—two well-executed sessions beat four mediocre ones.
Standing barbell overhead press is the gold standard for these benchmarks and overall strength development. Standing OHP requires full-body stability, engages your core, and allows for the most weight. Use standing OHP as your main movement. Seated press isolates shoulders more and removes any subtle leg involvement, making it excellent as a secondary variation or for strict shoulder work. You'll typically press 10-15% less weight seated. Include both: standing as primary exercise for maximum strength, seated as accessory for additional shoulder volume without taxing your core as much.
Strict Overhead Press: No leg drive, heels stay planted, press purely with upper body. Tests pure pressing strength. Push Press: Uses a small knee dip and leg drive to generate momentum, allowing 10-20% more weight. Tests explosive power. Both are valuable exercises with different purposes. These strength standards apply only to strict OHP. Push press is excellent for: overloading shoulders with heavier weight, building explosive power, and working through plateaus. But don't confuse the two—your push press numbers shouldn't be compared to strict OHP standards.
The overhead press is the slowest progressing major lift for several reasons: (1) it uses smaller muscle groups (deltoids) compared to squat/deadlift, (2) requires exceptional stability limiting how much weight you can handle, (3) has a long range of motion, (4) offers poor mechanical leverage, and (5) is often limited by core strength before shoulder strength. At intermediate+ levels, adding 5 lbs every 2-3 months is normal and good progress. To maximize gains: train OHP 2-3x weekly, use periodization, include accessory work (lateral raises, face pulls), ensure adequate calories and protein, and be patient. Small, consistent progress adds up over years.
Overhead press is excellent for overall shoulder development and should be your primary shoulder exercise, but it primarily targets front delts. For complete, well-rounded shoulder development, add: (1) Lateral raises for side delts (creates width), (2) Face pulls or rear delt flys for rear delts (prevents imbalances, improves posture), and (3) Upright rows or shrugs for traps. A complete shoulder routine includes OHP as the main compound movement (4-6 sets heavy) plus 6-9 sets of accessory work for side and rear delts. This balanced approach builds strong, aesthetic, injury-resistant shoulders.
Safe 1RM Testing Protocol: (1) Warm up thoroughly (10 min light cardio, dynamic stretching), (2) Start with empty bar for 8-10 reps, (3) Add weight progressively: 50% for 5 reps, 70% for 3 reps, 85% for 1-2 reps, 90-95% for 1 rep, (4) Rest 3-5 minutes between heavy attempts, (5) Make small jumps (5-10 lbs) as you approach max, (6) Use spotter or safety setup if available, (7) Stop if form breaks down. Alternatively, use a 3-5RM and apply a multiplier (3RM × 1.08 or 5RM × 1.15 estimates 1RM). Test 1RM only every 6-12 weeks, not weekly.
Yes, these standards are designed for natural (drug-free) lifters with proper training. Beginner through intermediate levels are very achievable for most people within 1-3 years. Advanced level (bodyweight OHP for men, 0.75x for women) requires 3-5+ years but is absolutely attainable naturally. Elite level (1.25x+ for men, 0.95x+ for women) pushes closer to natural genetic limits and may take 7-10+ years, representing the top 1-2% of natural lifters. If you have favorable genetics (long arms, good leverages, high muscle-building potential), you may progress faster. These standards assume consistent, intelligent training, proper nutrition, and adequate recovery.
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Last Updated: February 14, 2026. These standards are general guidelines based on population averages and training data. Individual results vary based on genetics, training history, and consistency. Always prioritize proper form and injury prevention over chasing numbers. Consult qualified coaches or trainers for personalized programming.