Reading time: 8 minutes · Last updated: June 2026
Table of Contents
- Why Weight Classes Matter
- Powerlifting Australia Weight Classes (Men and Women)
- GPC Australia and Powerlifting NZ Weight Classes
- How to Choose Your Weight Class
- Cutting Weight — When It Makes Sense
- DOTS — Comparing Across Classes
- Common Mistakes When Choosing a Class
- FAQ
- Related Articles
🎯 Why Weight Classes Matter
Powerlifting is contested in weight classes to ensure fair competition between athletes of similar body size. Your weight class determines who you compete against, which records you’re eligible for, and how your total is ranked within your division.
Choosing the right weight class is one of the most important strategic decisions a powerlifter makes. Competing too heavy means you’re giving away a size advantage. Cutting too aggressively means you arrive at the platform depleted and underperform. The goal is to find the class where you can compete at your strongest — not just your lightest.
🇦🇺 Powerlifting Australia Weight Classes
Powerlifting Australia is IPF-affiliated and uses IPF weight classes. These classes apply to all PA sanctioned meets, Australian Championships, and IPF World Championships.
Men’s Powerlifting Australia Weight Classes
| Weight Class | Compete If You Weigh |
|---|---|
| 59kg | Up to 59.00kg |
| 66kg | 59.01kg – 66.00kg |
| 74kg | 66.01kg – 74.00kg |
| 83kg | 74.01kg – 83.00kg |
| 93kg | 83.01kg – 93.00kg |
| 105kg | 93.01kg – 105.00kg |
| 120kg | 105.01kg – 120.00kg |
| 120kg+ | Over 120.00kg |
Women’s Powerlifting Australia Weight Classes
| Weight Class | Compete If You Weigh |
|---|---|
| 47kg | Up to 47.00kg |
| 52kg | 47.01kg – 52.00kg |
| 57kg | 52.01kg – 57.00kg |
| 63kg | 57.01kg – 63.00kg |
| 69kg | 63.01kg – 69.00kg |
| 76kg | 69.01kg – 76.00kg |
| 84kg | 76.01kg – 84.00kg |
| 84kg+ | Over 84.00kg |
🇦🇺 GPC Australia and Powerlifting NZ Weight Classes
GPC Australia and Powerlifting NZ use different weight classes from Powerlifting Australia. Always confirm your class with your meet director before competing in a GPC or Powerlifting NZ event.
Men’s GPC Weight Classes
| Weight Class | Compete If You Weigh |
|---|---|
| 60kg | Up to 60.00kg |
| 67.5kg | 60.01kg – 67.50kg |
| 75kg | 67.51kg – 75.00kg |
| 82.5kg | 75.01kg – 82.50kg |
| 90kg | 82.51kg – 90.00kg |
| 100kg | 90.01kg – 100.00kg |
| 110kg | 100.01kg – 110.00kg |
| 110kg+ | Over 110.00kg |
Women’s GPC Weight Classes
| Weight Class | Compete If You Weigh |
|---|---|
| 44kg | Up to 44.00kg |
| 48kg | 44.01kg – 48.00kg |
| 52kg | 48.01kg – 52.00kg |
| 56kg | 52.01kg – 56.00kg |
| 60kg | 56.01kg – 60.00kg |
| 67.5kg | 60.01kg – 67.50kg |
| 75kg | 67.51kg – 75.00kg |
| 82.5kg | 75.01kg – 82.50kg |
| 90kg+ | Over 82.50kg |
🤔 How to Choose Your Weight Class
- Weigh yourself in the morning, fasted. This is your true competition bodyweight baseline.
- Identify your federation first. Powerlifting Australia and GPC use different classes — confirm which federation your meet is sanctioned under.
- Find the class you fall into naturally. If you weigh 80kg, you’re in the 83kg class (PA) or 82.5kg class (GPC).
- Check how far you are from the class below. A 1–2kg cut is manageable. A 6kg cut is not.
- Consider your trajectory. Still gaining muscle? Compete in the class above now and reassess in 6–12 months.
⚖️ Cutting Weight — When It Makes Sense
When cutting makes sense:
- You are within 2–3kg of the class limit at your natural morning weight
- The cut is less than 5% of your bodyweight
- You have 24+ hours between weigh-in and competition
- You have practised the cut and rehydration protocol before
When cutting does NOT make sense:
- You are more than 5kg above the class limit
- The cut would require severe water restriction or dehydration
- You are a beginner — focus on technique and strength, not weight manipulation
- Same-day weigh-ins — no time to rehydrate
📊 DOTS — Comparing Across Classes
Powerlifting Australia uses DOTS scoring for Best Lifter awards. DOTS adjusts your total for bodyweight, allowing fair comparison between lifters in different weight classes.
- DOTS score: Higher is better. Elite lifters score 400+. World-class lifters score 500+.
If you’re chasing a Best Lifter award, your DOTS score matters more than your raw total. A lighter lifter with a high relative total can beat a heavier lifter with a bigger absolute total.
⚠️ Common Mistakes When Choosing a Class
Cutting too aggressively as a beginner. Beginners should compete at their natural bodyweight. The performance loss from a hard cut far outweighs any competitive advantage at the beginner level.
Not checking which federation your meet is under. Powerlifting Australia and GPC use different weight classes. Confirm your class before registering.
Competing in a class that’s too heavy. If you’re naturally 78kg and competing in the 93kg class (PA), you’re giving away a significant size advantage.
Not accounting for meet-day weight gain. Most lifters gain 1–2kg between their morning weigh-in and competition. Factor this into your class selection.
🏋️ Find Your Class. Own Your Total.
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❓ FAQ
What weight classes does Powerlifting Australia use?
Powerlifting Australia follows IPF weight classes: Men — 59, 66, 74, 83, 93, 105, 120, 120kg+. Women — 47, 52, 57, 63, 69, 76, 84, 84kg+.
What weight classes does GPC Australia use?
GPC uses different classes: Men — 60, 67.5, 75, 82.5, 90, 100, 110, 110kg+. Women — 44, 48, 52, 56, 60, 67.5, 75, 82.5, 90kg+. Always confirm with your meet director.
Should I cut weight for my first meet?
No. Compete at your natural bodyweight for your first meet. Focus on the experience, not weight manipulation.
How much weight can I safely cut?
A cut of up to 5% of bodyweight with 24 hours to rehydrate is generally considered manageable. Beyond that, performance impact becomes significant.
Are Powerlifting Australia and GPC weight classes the same?
No — they use different class structures. Always confirm which federation your meet is sanctioned under before registering.
📚 Related Articles
- Meet Day Strategy — Oceania
- Training Programme Design — Oceania
- Squat Technique — Oceania
- Deadlift Technique — Oceania
- Weight Classes in Powerlifting — Europe Version
Written by T-K — Brand Strategist, Castiron Lift