Workout Calculator

Master your energy balance with our professional Workout Calorie Solver. Whether you're an endurance athlete tracking training load or a fitness enthusiast monitoring weight loss, accurately quantifying energy expenditure is vital. Our premium engine utilizes the Metabolic Equivalent of Task (MET) framework to deconstruct your exertion across dozens of activities, providing clear visibility into your metabolic burn rate.

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Workout Calculator: Plan Your Exercise and Track Performance

Effective workout planning involves more than simply showing up at the gym. Understanding your one-rep max, appropriate training weights for different rep ranges, rest periods, and progressive overload principles transforms random exercise into structured training that produces consistent results. Our Workout Calculator provides key metrics for strength training, cardio, and general fitness planning.

One Rep Max (1RM) Estimation

Your one-rep maximum is the maximum weight you can lift for a single repetition with full effort. Testing true 1RM is risky without a spotter. Instead, estimate it from a submaximal lift using validated formulas:

Epley Formula: 1RM = Weight ร— (1 + Reps/30)

Brzycki Formula: 1RM = Weight ร— (36 / (37 โˆ’ Reps))

Example: You lift 80 kg for 8 reps. Epley: 1RM = 80 ร— (1 + 8/30) = 80 ร— 1.267 = 101.3 kg. Brzycki: 1RM = 80 ร— (36/29) = 99.3 kg. Both are estimates โ€” actual 1RM varies by lifter, day, and exercise.

Training Weight by Rep Range

Recommended training loads as percentages of 1RM for different goals:

Strength (1โ€“5 reps): 85โ€“100% 1RM. Hypertrophy/muscle size (6โ€“12 reps): 67โ€“85% 1RM. Muscular endurance (12โ€“20+ reps): 50โ€“67% 1RM.

Example: 1RM = 100 kg. For 8-rep hypertrophy work: 67โ€“85% = 67โ€“85 kg. Start at 70 kg for 3 sets of 8, progressing when all 3 sets are completed with good form.

Progressive Overload Principle

The fundamental principle of strength training: the body adapts to training stress by getting stronger. To continue making progress, you must progressively increase the training stimulus โ€” more weight, more reps, more sets, less rest, or improved technique. The simplest form: when you can complete all planned sets and reps with good form, increase the weight by the smallest available increment (typically 2.5โ€“5 kg for compound lifts, 1โ€“2.5 kg for isolation exercises).

Rest Periods

Strength training (heavy 1โ€“5 reps): 3โ€“5 minutes rest between sets. Hypertrophy (6โ€“12 reps): 60โ€“90 seconds. Endurance/conditioning (15+ reps): 30โ€“60 seconds. Supersets (two exercises back to back): rest after the pair. Rest periods directly affect training quality and adaptation โ€” do not rush them for strength work.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter a recent lift: weight lifted and reps completed.
  2. Click Calculate for estimated 1RM and recommended weights for different rep ranges and training goals.

Conclusion

Training with specific weight targets based on your estimated 1RM removes the guesswork from strength programming and ensures you are working in the right intensity range for your goals. Use our Workout Calculator to set precise training loads, track your 1RM progress over time, and build a structured approach to continuous improvement.

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