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Percentage wave

5/3/1-Style Calculator

Enter a training max and generate a simple four-week percentage wave. This is a calculator for loading math, not an official program.

Training max based
Rounded loads
No signup, no ads

Training max

240 lb
Bench Press

Wave type

5/3/1-style
Generic percentage wave for training max users.

Week 1

65% x 5155 lb

75% x 5180 lb

85% x 5+205 lb

Week 2

70% x 3167.5 lb

80% x 3192.5 lb

90% x 3+215 lb

Week 3

75% x 5180 lb

85% x 3205 lb

95% x 1+227.5 lb

Week 4

40% x 595 lb

50% x 5120 lb

60% x 5145 lb

How to use the wave

Start with a conservative training max, not the biggest estimated 1RM you can justify. The purpose of a training-max wave is to keep the heavy work repeatable while leaving room for clean plus sets and future progress.

If every final set feels like a max attempt, lower the training max by 5-10% and rebuild the wave. The calculator gives the loading math; your bar speed and recovery decide whether the number is useful.

Training max first

A true one-rep max is the most you might lift once under ideal conditions. A training max is the number you can build weeks of useful work from. This calculator expects the second number. If you only have an estimated 1RM, use 85-90% for conservative blocks, 90% for a standard starting point, and higher percentages only when you recently handled heavy singles cleanly.

The weekly wave is intentionally simple: the percentages rise across the first three weeks, then the fourth week backs off. The calculator rounds each set to loadable barbell weights so the output can be used in a real gym instead of copied from a spreadsheet with impossible decimals.

Common mistakes

Practical example

If your e1RM bench is 262.5 lb, a standard 90% training max is about 235 lb. The first week then uses percentages of 235 lb, not 262.5 lb. That difference matters: it keeps the work repeatable, leaves room for strong plus sets, and makes the next cycle easier to progress.

Limitations

This is a percentage-wave calculator, not an official program. It does not choose assistance work, weekly frequency, deload rules, or progression jumps for you. Use it for loading math, then apply coaching judgment to volume, exercise selection, and recovery.

Sources

FAQ

Is this an official 5/3/1 program?

No. This is a generic percentage wave calculator for lifters using training maxes and 5/3/1-style loading.

Should I enter true 1RM or training max?

Enter a training max. If you only know your estimated 1RM, calculate 85-95% first and use that number here.

How should I handle plus sets?

Keep plus sets technically clean. Stop before form changes enough to make the next week worse.