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barbell jump squat Strength Standards

Quick Answer barbell jump squat

A 180 lb male with an Intermediate-level barbell jump squat of 146 lbs ranks at the 50th percentile (FVCP), stronger than ~50% of lifters. An Advanced lifter at this weight lifts 187 lbs (1.04x bodyweight).

FitnessVolt Competition Percentile (FVCP), based on 2.5M+ verified competition results

barbell jump squat demonstration
Competition-Derived

How strong is your barbell jump squat? Compare your 1RM against standards for 21 bodyweight categories, from Beginner to Elite.

Primary Muscles glutes
Equipment barbell
Data Points 71 rows
Difficulty Advanced
Type Compound

Estimated Standards - Estimated from squat standards using a 0.5x ratio.. These values are derived from verified competition data for the base exercise. Learn about our methodology

How Strong Is Your barbell jump squat?

Your FVCP:
FitnessVolt Competition Percentile, based on 2.5M+ verified results
th percentile
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to track your progress over time.

How Much Should You barbell jump squat?

1RM weight (lbs) you should be able to lift at each standard, based on your bodyweight.

BW (lbs) Beginner Novice Intermediate Advanced Elite
110 37 57 84 115 149
120 44 66 94 126 162
130 50 74 103 137 175
140 57 81 112 148 187
150 63 89 121 158 198
160 69 96 130 168 209
170 75 104 138 178 220
180 81 111 146 187 230
190 87 118 154 196 240
200 93 124 162 204 250
210 99 131 169 213 259
220 105 137 177 221 268
230 110 144 184 229 277
240 115 150 191 237 285
250 121 156 198 244 293
260 126 162 204 252 302
270 131 168 211 259 309
280 136 173 217 266 317
290 141 179 223 273 325
300 146 184 230 280 332
310 151 190 235 286 339

How Does Age Affect barbell jump squat Strength?

How barbell jump squat standards change across different age groups. Values represent a 1RM in lbs.

Age Beginner Novice Intermediate Advanced Elite
15 60 88 122 162 206
20 69 101 140 186 236
25 71 103 144 191 242
30 71 103 144 191 242
35 71 103 144 191 242
40 71 103 144 191 242
45 67 98 136 181 229
50 63 92 128 170 215
55 58 85 118 157 199
60 53 78 108 143 182
65 48 70 98 130 164
70 43 63 88 116 147
75 39 56 78 104 132
80 35 50 70 93 118
85 31 45 63 83 106
90 28 41 57 75 95

What Do barbell jump squat Strength Standards Mean?

Beginner

Stronger than 5% of lifters. You are learning to hit proper depth on the barbell jump squat, building ankle and hip mobility, and developing the bracing pattern needed to keep your torso upright under load.

Novice

Stronger than 20% of lifters. You can execute the barbell jump squat with consistent depth and bracing. You are adding weight session to session using linear progression and building foundational leg strength.

Intermediate

Stronger than 50% of lifters. Your barbell jump squat technique is solid through heavy loads. You use periodized programming, understand RPE-based autoregulation, and can grind through sticking points without form breakdown.

Advanced

Stronger than 80% of lifters. You have refined your barbell jump squat stance, bar position, and breathing to maximize leverage. You train with block periodization, manage fatigue across training cycles, and likely compete or train at a competitive level.

Elite

Stronger than 95% of lifters. Your barbell jump squat is at a regional or national competitive standard. You have years of structured peaking cycles behind you and have optimized every technical detail from walkout to lockout.

How to Progress Your barbell jump squat

Tier-specific training recommendations to move your barbell jump squat to the next level.

Beginner → Novice Building Your Foundation
  • Train the barbell jump squat 2x per week, focusing on hitting consistent depth every rep.
  • Use linear progression: add 5 lbs each session as long as form stays solid.
  • Record sets at RPE 6-7 to build volume without excessive fatigue.
  • Prioritize ankle and hip mobility work before each session.
Track your E1RM progress →
Novice → Intermediate Structured Progression
  • Switch from linear to weekly periodization (e.g., light/medium/heavy days).
  • Add a barbell jump squat variation (pause squats, tempo squats) for weak-point work.
  • Keep most working sets at RPE 7-8, with occasional top singles at RPE 9.
  • Start tracking your training volume (sets x reps x load) week to week.
Plan your RPE-based sessions →
Intermediate → Advanced Periodized Training Blocks
  • Run 4-6 week training blocks with planned intensity peaks and deloads.
  • Use RPE 8-9 for primary sets, RPE 7 for backoff volume.
  • Address specific sticking points with targeted accessory work.
  • Manage fatigue: total weekly sets of 12-20 for the barbell jump squat movement pattern.
Program your backoff sets →
Advanced → Elite Competition-Level Peaking
  • Run structured peaking cycles (8-12 weeks) leading to maximal attempts.
  • Fine-tune technique details: walkout, descent speed, breath timing.
  • Use the RPE chart to hit precise percentages during peaking blocks.
  • Consider competing to test your barbell jump squat under meet conditions.
View RPE-to-percentage chart →

How to Perform barbell jump squat

["Start by standing with your feet shoulder-width apart, holding a barbell across your upper back.","Lower your body into a squat position by bending your knees and pushing your hips back.","Once you reach the bottom of the squat, explode upwards by jumping off the ground.","As you jump, extend your hips, knees, and ankles, pushing through your toes.","Land softly back into the squat position and immediately repeat the movement for the desired number of repetitions."]

Read the complete barbell jump squat guide on FitnessVolt →

Where Do These barbell jump squat Standards Come From?

These barbell jump squat standards are based on 2.5M+ verified competition results from powerlifting, weightlifting, and strongman federations worldwide. Every number comes from a sanctioned meet with certified judges - not self-reported gym lifts. Data is sourced from OpenPowerlifting and other verified competition databases, ensuring accuracy you can trust.

Last Updated: March 30, 2026

Reviewed by the Fitness Volt Editorial Team, certified strength training analysts.

Is Your barbell jump squat Good for Your Weight?

Strength standards help you objectively measure your barbell jump squat performance relative to other lifters of the same bodyweight and sex. Here is how to interpret them:

  1. Find your bodyweight in the left column of the table above.
  2. Look across the row to find which strength level your 1RM falls into.
  3. Use the age tab to see how your strength compares within your age group.
  4. Switch between Male and Female standards using the toggle - each has its own dataset.

If you do not know your 1RM, use the E1RM Calculator to estimate it from any rep set. For example, if you can barbell jump squat 185 lbs for 5 reps, the calculator will estimate your max.

These standards are derived from 2.5M+ competition results across powerlifting, weightlifting, and strongman federations worldwide, combined with community training data.

Frequently Asked Questions

A "good" barbell jump squat depends on your bodyweight, sex, and training experience. As a general benchmark, an Intermediate-level lift (stronger than 50% of lifters) is a solid goal for most recreational athletes. Check the table above for your specific bodyweight.
Most lifters can reach Intermediate level on the barbell jump squat within 1-2 years of consistent training with progressive overload and proper nutrition. Genetics, training program quality, and recovery all play a role.
Yes. Our standards are calculated from 2.5M+ verified competition results and community-reported data. They are adjusted for bodyweight and age to give you an accurate comparison.
These standards are based on raw (unequipped) lifts. If you use supportive equipment like a bench shirt or squat suit, your equipped numbers will be higher than these standards reflect.