Reverse Lunge

Reverse Lunge Standards

Measured in lb

Reverse Lunge strength standards help you to compare your one-rep max lift with other lifters at your bodyweight.

Our community Reverse Lunge standards are based on 10,150 lifts by Strength Level users
Reverse Lunge

Male Reverse Lunge Standards

Entire Community

Strength LevelReps
Beginner< 1
Novice10
Intermediate34
Advanced64
Elite99

How many reps of Reverse Lunge should I be able to do?

How many reps of Reverse Lunge can the average lifter do? The average male lifter can do 34 reps of Reverse Lunge. This makes you Intermediate on Strength Level and is a very impressive achievement.

Reps By Weight and Age

BWBeg.Nov.Int.Adv.Elite
110< 193876120
120< 193774115
130< 1103771111
140< 1103669107
150< 1103667103
160< 1113565100
170< 111346497
180< 111346293
190< 111336091
200< 110325888
210< 110315785
220< 110315583
230< 110305480
240< 110295278
250< 110285176
260< 110285074
270< 19274972
280< 19264770
290< 19264669
300< 19254567
310< 19244465

How many sets and reps of Reverse Lunge should I do?

These are the most popular Reverse Lunge workouts done by male lifters:

3x10 16%
2x10 10%
3x12 10%
3x8 7%
3x15 6%

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What do the strength standards mean?

Beginner Stronger than 5% of lifters. A beginner lifter can perform the movement correctly and has practiced it for at least a month.
Novice Stronger than 20% of lifters. A novice lifter has trained regularly in the technique for at least six months.
Intermediate Stronger than 50% of lifters. An intermediate lifter has trained regularly in the technique for at least two years.
Advanced Stronger than 80% of lifters. An advanced lifter has progressed for over five years.
Elite Stronger than 95% of lifters. An elite lifter has dedicated over five years to become competitive at strength sports.