Glutes

HIP THRUST MAX CALCULATOR

Enter the weight and reps from a recent hip thrust set. This tool runs it through three trusted formulas and averages them into a single estimated one-rep max, plus a percentage-based loading table for your next glute session.

Enter Your Set

Most accurate at 1–10 reps.

Your Estimated Max

Epley
estimated 1RM
Brzycki
estimated 1RM
Lombardi
estimated 1RM
Average (Recommended)
estimated 1RM

Training Loads By Percentage

% of MaxLoadTypical Reps
Calculate your max to see loading targets

How the Hip Thrust Max Calculator Works

A one-rep max (1RM) is the heaviest weight you can lift for a single, complete repetition with proper form. Testing a true 1RM is fatiguing and carries injury risk, so most lifters and coaches estimate it instead, using the weight and reps from a submaximal set performed close to failure. This calculator runs your set through three of the most widely used estimation formulas and averages the results, since no single formula is perfectly accurate for every lifter, rep range, or lift.

The Epley Formula

Developed by Boyd Epley, this is the most commonly cited 1RM formula in strength and conditioning: 1RM = weight × (1 + reps / 30). It assumes a roughly linear relationship between reps and percentage of max, and tends to run slightly higher than other formulas at higher rep counts.

The Brzycki Formula

Matt Brzycki's formula uses a different curve: 1RM = weight × 36 / (37 − reps). It's generally considered more accurate at lower rep ranges (1–10) and is the formula behind many printed gym percentage charts.

The Lombardi Formula

An older formula from exercise scientist Vittori Lombardi: 1RM = weight × reps^0.10. It produces a more conservative estimate than Epley at high rep counts, which is useful as a sanity check against the other two.

Why Hip Thrust Numbers Run High — And That's Normal

Hip thrust 1RM numbers are often surprisingly high relative to a lifter's squat or deadlift, because the movement is short-range, glute-dominant, and doesn't require balancing a bar overhead or off the floor. This is expected and not a sign the estimate is wrong. Because setup (bar padding, bench height, foot position) varies more between gyms than with barbell squats, compare your estimated max against your own past numbers rather than against strength-standard charts built around squat/bench/deadlift data.

Using the Percentage Table

Once you have an estimated max, the percentage table above gives you target loads for common training zones: heavy singles and doubles near 90–95%, strength work in the 80–85% range, and volume/hypertrophy work from 60–75%. These are starting points — adjust based on how the bar actually moves that day.

Limitations of Any 1RM Formula

  • Accuracy drops as rep count increases past about 10–12 reps.
  • Formulas assume the set was taken close to failure with consistent bar speed.
  • Individual fatigue resistance, fiber type, and technique efficiency all shift the true number up or down.
  • A calculated max is a planning estimate, not a guarantee of what you can lift on a given day.

Informational Use Only

This calculator provides estimates for training-planning purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional coaching, in-person technique assessment, or medical advice. Estimated one-rep max values can vary meaningfully from a lifter's actual performance. Always warm up progressively, use a spotter or safety bars when testing heavier loads, and stop immediately if you experience pain. GymMaxCalculators.com and its owners assume no liability for injury, loss, or damage arising from the use of this tool or reliance on its output. Consult a qualified coach, trainer, or physician before attempting a new maximal lift.