LiftGauge

Is a 495 lb deadlift good?

Short answer: it depends on bodyweight. A 495 lb (225 kg) deadlift is elite for a lighter lifter and ordinary for a heavyweight. Here's the exact percentile at every bodyweight, against gym-goers and against competitors.

495 lb deadlift for men percentile by bodyweight

Versus recreational gym-goers (StrengthLevel):

BodyweightPercentileReads as
50 kg 110 lb95th+top 5% or stronger
55 kg 121 lb95th+top 5% or stronger
60 kg 132 lb95th+top 5% or stronger
65 kg 143 lb95th+top 5% or stronger
70 kg 154 lb95th+top 5% or stronger
75 kg 165 lb95th+top 5% or stronger
80 kg 176 lb91thtop 10%
85 kg 187 lb88thtop 25%
90 kg 198 lb85thtop 25%
95 kg 209 lb81thtop 25%
100 kg 220 lb78thtop 25%
105 kg 231 lb72thtop 50%
110 kg 243 lb67thtop 50%
115 kg 254 lb62thtop 50%
120 kg 265 lb57thtop 50%
125 kg 276 lb53thtop 50%
130 kg 287 lb48thtop 75%
135 kg 298 lb44thtop 75%
140 kg 309 lb40thtop 75%

Versus raw competitors (OpenPowerlifting):

BodyweightPercentileReads as
53 kg 117 lb99th+top 1% or stronger
59 kg 130 lb93thtop 10%
66 kg 146 lb83thtop 25%
74 kg 163 lb72thtop 50%
83 kg 183 lb55thtop 50%
93 kg 205 lb45thtop 75%
105 kg 231 lb37thtop 75%
120 kg 265 lb32thtop 75%
140 kg+ 309 lb31thtop 75%

495 lb deadlift for women percentile by bodyweight

Versus recreational gym-goers (StrengthLevel):

BodyweightPercentileReads as
40 kg 88 lb95th+top 5% or stronger
45 kg 99 lb95th+top 5% or stronger
50 kg 110 lb95th+top 5% or stronger
55 kg 121 lb95th+top 5% or stronger
60 kg 132 lb95th+top 5% or stronger
65 kg 143 lb95th+top 5% or stronger
70 kg 154 lb95th+top 5% or stronger
75 kg 165 lb95th+top 5% or stronger
80 kg 176 lb95th+top 5% or stronger
85 kg 187 lb95th+top 5% or stronger
90 kg 198 lb95th+top 5% or stronger
95 kg 209 lb95th+top 5% or stronger
100 kg 220 lb95th+top 5% or stronger
105 kg 231 lb95th+top 5% or stronger
110 kg 243 lb95th+top 5% or stronger
115 kg 254 lb95th+top 5% or stronger
120 kg 265 lb95th+top 5% or stronger

Versus raw competitors (OpenPowerlifting):

BodyweightPercentileReads as
43 kg 95 lb99th+top 1% or stronger
47 kg 104 lb99th+top 1% or stronger
52 kg 115 lb99th+top 1% or stronger
57 kg 126 lb99th+top 1% or stronger
63 kg 139 lb99th+top 1% or stronger
69 kg 152 lb99th+top 1% or stronger
76 kg 168 lb99th+top 1% or stronger
84 kg 185 lb98thtop 5%
120 kg+ 265 lb98thtop 5%

These are dead-stop pulls; raw competition allows both conventional and sumo stance on the same scoreboard, so the standard pools them. Dead-stop is the meet standard — touch-and-go reps use the stretch reflex off the floor and read higher than a competition pull. Vanderburgh & Batterham 1999 is why the deadlift standard climbs with bodyweight while strength-per-kilo falls (PMID 10613442).

FAQ

Is a 495 lb deadlift good?
It depends entirely on bodyweight. A 495 lb deadlift is elite for a lightweight lifter and average-to-good for a heavyweight. The tables on this page give the exact percentile at every bodyweight, against both recreational gym-goers (StrengthLevel) and competitive powerlifters (OpenPowerlifting).
495 lb deadlift — what bodyweight makes it impressive?
Read down the bodyweight column: the lighter you are, the higher the percentile a fixed 495 lb deadlift represents, because Strength scales sub-linearly with bodyweight — heavier lifters lift more in absolute terms but less per kilo of bodyweight (Vanderburgh & Batterham 1999, PMID 10613442). The same bar is a top-tier lift at one bodyweight and a working set at another.
Is the comparison against gym-goers or competitors?
Both, side by side. The recreational percentile uses StrengthLevel's self-reported logs — the right yardstick if you train at a commercial gym. The competitive percentile uses OpenPowerlifting meet data — the yardstick if you plan to compete. The same lift usually ranks higher against gym-goers than against competitors.

Competitive figures: OpenPowerlifting (public competition meet data (CC0), snapshot 2026-05-16, CC0). Recreational figures: StrengthLevel (153 million+ self-reported gym-log lifts; self-reported). Full method at /method. Check your own lift on the percentile calculator.