Push-Up Test Calculator
Score your push-up fitness by age and sex—with YMCA/ACSM norms, fitness rating, percentile estimate, 4-week improvement plan, and form checklist.
Enter your details — results appear below after you calculate.
Your profile
Test setup
How this Push-Up Test Calculator works
Enter your age and sex, choose push-up style (standard from toes or modified from knees) and test protocol (to exhaustion or 1-minute test), then enter your push-up count. We compare your reps to YMCA/ACSM normative tables for your age band and assign a fitness rating from Excellent through Needs Improvement.
Your report includes an estimated percentile, reps needed to reach the next category, a full norm table for your age group, a personalized 4-week improvement plan, proper form checklist, training recommendations, and PDF export / share. Men are scored on standard push-ups; women may select standard or modified depending on their test.
For strength benchmarks, try our One Rep Max Calculator. For muscle-loss screening in older adults, use the Sarcopenia Risk Calculator. Retest every 4–6 weeks with the same protocol for accurate progress tracking.
Push-Up Test Calculator — Score Your Upper-Body Fitness by Age & Sex
Every day, thousands search "push-up test calculator", "how many push-ups should I do", "push-up fitness test by age", or "push-up standards for men and women"—looking for a quick, shareable way to benchmark upper-body endurance. Whether you are preparing for a fitness assessment, tracking gym progress, or comparing scores with friends, the push-up test remains one of the most practical field assessments for chest, shoulder, triceps, and core endurance. Our free Push-Up Test Calculator scores your reps against YMCA/ACSM normative tables by age and sex; rates you Excellent through Needs Improvement; estimates your percentile; shows reps needed for the next level; and includes a 4-week improvement plan, form checklist, and PDF export.
Pair results with our One Rep Max Calculator, Sarcopenia Risk Calculator, and Daily Steps Target Calculator for a complete fitness assessment toolkit.
What Is the Push-Up Test?
The push-up test measures how many push-ups you can perform with proper form—either until exhaustion or within a fixed time—then compares your count to population norms. It is used by the YMCA, ACSM (American College of Sports Medicine), schools, corporate wellness programs, and military fitness screening worldwide because it requires no equipment and tests functional upper-body endurance.
Unlike a bench press 1RM, the push-up test emphasizes muscular endurance and core stability together. A high score reflects not just strong chest and arms, but also the ability to maintain a rigid plank position rep after rep—skills that translate to daily activities like pushing doors, lifting objects, and preventing falls in older adults.
1What You Enter
Profile
- Age (15–100 years) — determines your age band
- Sex (male / female) — selects the norm table
Test setup
- Push-up style — Standard (toes) or Modified (knees)
- Protocol — To exhaustion or 1-minute test
Your score
- Push-ups completed — only reps with full, proper form
Example
Male, age 28, standard push-ups to exhaustion, 42 reps → Good fitness (20–29 band: Good = 45–53; you are close to Excellent at 54+).
2How Scoring Works
Your rep count is compared to age-band thresholds in five categories:
| Rating | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Excellent | Top ~10% for your age and sex |
| Good | Above average — solid fitness base |
| Average | Typical for general population |
| Fair | Below average — room to improve |
| Needs Improvement | Low endurance — structured training recommended |
Thresholds differ by age band (20–29, 30–39, 40–49, 50–59, 60–69, 70+), sex, push-up style, and test protocol. Men are scored on standard push-ups; women may use standard or modified depending on their test choice.
3Sample Norms — Men, Standard, To Exhaustion
| Age | Excellent | Good | Average | Fair |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 20–29 | 54+ | 45–53 | 35–44 | 20–34 |
| 30–39 | 44+ | 35–43 | 24–34 | 15–23 |
| 40–49 | 39+ | 30–38 | 20–29 | 12–19 |
| 50–59 | 34+ | 25–33 | 15–24 | 8–14 |
| 60+ | 24+ | 15–23 | 8–14 | 3–7 |
Based on YMCA/ACSM fitness test norms. Women's tables and 1-minute protocol thresholds are applied automatically in the calculator.
4Proper Push-Up Form
- Start position: Hands slightly wider than shoulders, fingers forward. Body in a straight line from head to heels (or knees for modified).
- Descent: Lower chest until elbows reach ~90°. Keep core tight—no hip sag or piking.
- Ascent: Push through palms to full arm extension. Do not lock elbows aggressively.
- Tempo: Controlled 1–2 second down, 1 second up. No bouncing off the floor.
- Breathing: Inhale on the way down, exhale on the push.
Reps without full range of motion should not be counted. A partner or video review helps ensure fair scoring.
54-Week Improvement Plan
After scoring, the calculator generates a progressive plan:
- Week 1: Focus on form — 3 sessions of 3 sets at 60–70% of max reps
- Week 2: Add 1–2 reps per set; 60–90 s rest between sets
- Week 3: 3 sets to near-failure; track your best set
- Week 4: Retest your max and compare to your starting score
Most beginners add 30–50% more reps in 4 weeks with consistent training. If you cannot do floor push-ups, start with incline push-ups (hands on a bench) and progress to the floor over 4–6 weeks.
6Who Should Use This Calculator?
Gym & fitness
- Benchmark upper-body endurance monthly
- Compare with friends (use age-adjusted ratings)
- Track recomp or cutting phase strength maintenance
Health & aging
- Screen upper-body function in adults 50+
- Complement sarcopenia risk screening
- Motivate resistance training adherence
Sports & military prep
- Practice test protocol before official assessments
- Identify gaps before boot camp or academy
- Combine with running and plank tests
Beginners
- Start with modified or incline push-ups
- Set a baseline before any training program
- Celebrate progress with shareable PDF results
7Training to Improve Your Score
Most people can add 30–50% more reps in 4 weeks with consistent practice. Use this proven progression:
Beginners (0–10 reps)
- Wall push-ups → incline (bench) → knee → floor
- 3 sets, 3×/week, add 1–2 reps per session
- Focus on full range of motion before adding speed
Intermediate (15–35 reps)
- 3–4 sets at 70–80% of max reps, 60–90 s rest
- Add diamond, wide-grip, or tempo push-ups for variety
- Pair with rows and face pulls for shoulder balance
Advanced (35+ reps)
- Weighted vest push-ups or decline push-ups
- Grease-the-groove: multiple submax sets across the day
- Periodize: 2 weeks volume, 1 week deload, retest
Older adults (50+)
- Modified or incline push-ups are valid starting points
- Combine with grip strength and balance work
- See our Sarcopenia Risk Calculator for muscle-loss screening
Push-Up Test vs Related Fitness Tools
| Question | Use this calculator | Use another tool |
|---|---|---|
| "How fit are my push-ups for my age?" | ✓ Push-Up Test | — |
| Bench press max strength (1RM) | — | One Rep Max |
| Muscle loss risk with aging | — | Sarcopenia Risk |
| Daily cardio / step goals | — | Daily Steps Target |
| 4-week push-up improvement plan | ✓ Push-Up Test | — |
Women's vs Men's Push-Up Testing
YMCA and ACSM protocols historically score men on standard push-ups (from toes) and allow women to choose between standard or modified (knee) push-ups—each with separate norm tables. Modified push-ups reduce the load by roughly 40–50%, so thresholds differ significantly.
Men (standard)
Age 20–29: Excellent = 54+ reps to exhaustion. Scores decline with age as upper-body muscle mass naturally decreases—scoring Good at 55 requires fewer reps than at 25.
Women (modified)
Age 20–29: Excellent = 54+ modified reps. Women doing standard push-ups have lower thresholds (Excellent = 36+) reflecting higher relative load. Pick the style you actually tested with.
How to Prepare for Your Push-Up Test
- Warm up 3–5 minutes: arm circles, shoulder rolls, 2–3 easy push-ups or wall push-ups
- Rest 24–48 hours after heavy chest or shoulder training before testing
- Same surface every time: firm floor, mat optional—avoid soft surfaces that absorb force
- Count only valid reps: partner or video helps catch half-reps
- One max attempt: rest 3–5 minutes if retrying; use your best set
- Retest every 4–6 weeks with identical protocol and style
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
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