Reading time: 10 minutes | Last updated: May 2026
One of the most common questions women new to powerlifting ask is: "Am I strong enough to compete?" The answer is almost always yes — but having clear strength benchmarks helps you understand where you are, set realistic goals, and track progress over time. This guide covers women’s powerlifting strength standards from beginner to elite across all major USAPL bodyweight classes, with context on what each level means in practice.
Table of Contents
- Understanding Strength Levels
- Women's Squat Standards
- Women's Bench Press Standards
- Women's Deadlift Standards
- Women's Total Standards
- Standards by Weight Class
- What These Numbers Mean in Practice
- How to Improve Your Numbers
- Footwear and Performance
- FAQ
📊 Understanding Strength Levels
| Level | Definition | Training age |
|---|---|---|
| Beginner | Just started barbell training. Still learning technique. | 0–6 months |
| Novice | Consistent training, technique improving, linear progression still working. | 6–18 months |
| Intermediate | Solid technique, stalling on linear progression, competing or ready to compete. | 1.5–3 years |
| Advanced | Competing regularly, placing at regional/national level. | 3–6 years |
| Elite | National/international competitor, top percentile of the sport. | 6+ years |

Women's powerlifting strength levels — beginner to elite — Castiron Lift
🦵 Women's Squat Standards (lbs)
| WOMEN'S SQUAT STANDARDS BY BODYWEIGHT (LBS) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bodyweight | Beginner | Novice | Intermediate | Advanced | Elite |
| 114 lbs | 65 | 100 | 140 | 185 | 235 |
| 123 lbs | 75 | 110 | 155 | 200 | 255 |
| 132 lbs | 80 | 120 | 165 | 215 | 275 |
| 148 lbs | 90 | 135 | 185 | 240 | 305 |
| 165 lbs | 100 | 150 | 205 | 265 | 335 |
| 181 lbs | 110 | 160 | 220 | 285 | 360 |
| 198 lbs+ | 120 | 175 | 240 | 310 | 390 |
💪 Women's Bench Press Standards (lbs)
| WOMEN'S BENCH PRESS STANDARDS BY BODYWEIGHT (LBS) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bodyweight | Beginner | Novice | Intermediate | Advanced | Elite |
| 114 lbs | 45 | 65 | 90 | 120 | 155 |
| 123 lbs | 50 | 70 | 100 | 130 | 165 |
| 132 lbs | 55 | 75 | 105 | 140 | 175 |
| 148 lbs | 60 | 85 | 115 | 155 | 195 |
| 165 lbs | 65 | 95 | 130 | 170 | 215 |
| 181 lbs | 70 | 100 | 140 | 185 | 230 |
| 198 lbs+ | 75 | 110 | 150 | 200 | 250 |
🏋️ Women's Deadlift Standards (lbs)
| WOMEN'S DEADLIFT STANDARDS BY BODYWEIGHT (LBS) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bodyweight | Beginner | Novice | Intermediate | Advanced | Elite |
| 114 lbs | 85 | 125 | 170 | 220 | 275 |
| 123 lbs | 95 | 135 | 185 | 240 | 300 |
| 132 lbs | 100 | 145 | 195 | 255 | 320 |
| 148 lbs | 110 | 160 | 215 | 280 | 350 |
| 165 lbs | 120 | 175 | 235 | 305 | 385 |
| 181 lbs | 130 | 185 | 250 | 325 | 410 |
| 198 lbs+ | 140 | 200 | 270 | 350 | 440 |
🏆 Women's Total Standards (lbs)
| WOMEN'S POWERLIFTING TOTAL STANDARDS (LBS) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bodyweight | Beginner | Novice | Intermediate | Advanced | Elite |
| 114 lbs | 195 | 290 | 400 | 525 | 665 |
| 132 lbs | 235 | 340 | 465 | 610 | 770 |
| 148 lbs | 260 | 380 | 515 | 675 | 850 |
| 165 lbs | 285 | 420 | 570 | 740 | 935 |
| 198 lbs+ | 335 | 485 | 660 | 860 | 1080 |
📊 Standards by Weight Class

Women's average powerlifting totals by bodyweight class — Castiron Lift
💬 What These Numbers Mean in Practice
- Beginner standards are achievable within 3–6 months of consistent training with a structured programme.
- Novice standards are typical for women who have completed their first 8–12 week programme and are ready for their first meet.
- Intermediate standards represent a competitive club-level lifter who has been training consistently for 1–2 years.
- Advanced standards are regional/national-level competitors. Most women never reach this level — and don’t need to in order to enjoy the sport.
- Elite standards are top-percentile national and international competitors. These are exceptional numbers.
Important: These standards are based on raw (unequipped) lifting in USAPL-style competition. Equipped lifting (with squat suit, bench shirt) produces significantly higher numbers.
📈 How to Improve Your Numbers
| Where you are | Best next step |
|---|---|
| Below beginner standards | Run the Castiron Lift Beginner Programme — 8 weeks of linear progression |
| Beginner → Novice | Continue linear progression or run GZCLP |
| Novice → Intermediate | Run the Castiron Lift Strength Programme — 12-week DUP |
| Intermediate → Advanced | Run 5/3/1 or nSuns |
👟 Footwear and Performance
Footwear has a measurable impact on squat performance. Weightlifting shoes with a 20mm heel elevation improve squat depth and allow a more upright torso position — particularly important for women with limited ankle mobility. Consistent footwear across all squat sessions builds the motor pattern that transfers directly to competition. See our Best Squat Shoes 2026 — USA guide for recommendations at every price point.
FAQ
Are these standards based on USAPL data?
These standards are derived from USAPL competition data and widely-used strength calculators (Symmetric Strength, StrengthLevel). They represent raw, drug-tested lifting.
Should I compare myself to these standards?
Use them as directional benchmarks, not rigid targets. Progress is individual. A woman who goes from 0 to a 300 lb total in 12 months has made exceptional progress regardless of where that sits on a chart.
Do these standards apply to masters (40+) lifters?
Masters lifters typically achieve 85–95% of open standards. The sport has separate masters categories — you compete against your age group, not open lifters.
💪 Ready to build your numbers?
Start with the Castiron Lift Beginner Programme — free 8-week powerlifting programme.
Related Articles
- Powerlifting for Women — Beginner's Guide — USA
- Castiron Lift Beginner Programme — USA
- Castiron Lift Strength Programme — USA
- Best Squat Shoes 2026 — USA
Written by T-K — Strength Researcher & Brand Strategist, Castiron Lift.