Deadlift 1RM Calculator

Estimate your deadlift max and get a useful target. A deadlift e1RM is useful when the set standard is consistent. Do not chase a heavier pull when speed, brace, or start position has clearly degraded.

Log the set in Jacked and the next target stays with the workout.

Calculator

deadlift 1RM calculator

How to read the result

Estimate your deadlift max and get a useful target. The notes below show the assumptions behind that recommendation.

What deadlift e1RM means

This is a ballpark estimate from a submaximal deadlift set, not a guaranteed max attempt.

Why RIR improves the estimate

The same reps at different effort levels imply different strength. RIR makes the estimate more useful.

Best data for this lift

Use recent sets where deadlift execution matched your normal standard.

Common mistake

Do not chase a heavier pull when speed, brace, or start position has clearly degraded.

Short answers

Is this deadlift 1RM exact?

No. It is a training estimate. Use it for trends and targets, not as proof of a tested max.

Should I test a true 1RM?

Only when it fits your goal, skill, and recovery. Most hypertrophy training does not require frequent max testing.

Jacked turns your training history into next-set targets, RIR tracking, rest timing, smart warm-ups, PRs, and progress feedback.

Method, assumptions, and privacy

Method

Combines common e1RM formulas where valid, then adds rep maxes, percentages, and a useful target instead of stopping at a max estimate.

Assumptions

High-rep and sloppy sets are lower-confidence. Treat e1RM as a trend and targeting tool, not a guaranteed max.

Privacy

Inputs are handled in the browser for the web tool experience. Jacked should only store lifting data when a user chooses to log it in the app.

Check the method before you trust the number. Bad inputs still produce tidy-looking outputs.

This is one set.

Jacked does it for your whole workout: next-set targets, RIR, rest timing, warm-ups, PRs, and progress feedback.

Download Jacked for iPhone