Power Clean Strength Standards
For women · by bodyweight · in kg
The power clean is an Olympic weightlifting movement that develops explosive power in the posterior chain and requires significant technical proficiency. It is caught in a partial squat rather than a full squat clean. Standards reflect both raw strength and technical development — technique is a major limiting factor at all levels.
Find Your Level
Enter your stats and we'll highlight your row and level in the table below.
Don't know your 1RM? Calculate it →| Bodyweight (kg) | Beginner Top 80% | Novice Top 60% | Intermediate Top 40% | Advanced Top 20% | Elite Top 5% | ÷ BW |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 50 | 16 kg | 26 kg | 37 kg | 51 kg | 65 kg | 0.74× |
| 55 | 16 kg | 26 kg | 37 kg | 51 kg | 65 kg | 0.67× |
| 60 | 16 kg | 26 kg | 37 kg | 51 kg | 65 kg | 0.62× |
| 65 | 18 kg | 30 kg | 43 kg | 57 kg | 73 kg | 0.66× |
| 70 | 18 kg | 30 kg | 43 kg | 57 kg | 73 kg | 0.61× |
| 75 | 21 kg | 34 kg | 47 kg | 61 kg | 76 kg | 0.63× |
| 80 | 21 kg | 34 kg | 47 kg | 61 kg | 76 kg | 0.59× |
| 85 | 23 kg | 37 kg | 52 kg | 68 kg | 84 kg | 0.61× |
| 90 | 23 kg | 37 kg | 52 kg | 68 kg | 84 kg | 0.58× |
| 95 | 24 kg | 40 kg | 56 kg | 73 kg | 91 kg | 0.59× |
| 100 | 24 kg | 40 kg | 56 kg | 73 kg | 91 kg | 0.56× |
| 110 | 26 kg | 43 kg | 60 kg | 78 kg | 97 kg | 0.55× |
| 120 | 26 kg | 43 kg | 60 kg | 78 kg | 97 kg | 0.50× |
| 140 | 26 kg | 43 kg | 60 kg | 78 kg | 97 kg | 0.43× |
Power Clean Strength Standards for Women
These power clean strength standards cover female lifters across a range of bodyweights in KG. Each row shows five thresholds - Beginner, Novice, Intermediate, Advanced, and Elite - representing roughly the top 80%, 60%, 40%, 20%, and 5% of the lifting population at that bodyweight. Use the "Find My Level" tool above to enter your one rep max and see exactly where you stand.
Standards are based on aggregated data from large populations of raw, natural lifters. An intermediate power clean is a realistic long-term goal for most people who train consistently - it typically requires 2–4 years of progressive training with structured programming. Advanced and Elite levels represent competitive performance and require deliberate, periodised training over many years.
Strength levels are always relative to bodyweight. A power clean that is elite at 60 kg bodyweight is only intermediate at 100 kg - the absolute numbers scale with size. This is why every row in the table shows different thresholds rather than a single cutoff. If you are between bodyweight brackets, the standard for the nearest bracket is a reasonable guide.
Power Clean Technique Cues
- - Bar over mid-foot, hook grip or standard grip
- - Same initial position as a conventional deadlift
- - First pull: maintain deadlift posture as bar passes the knees
- - Second pull: explosive hip extension with shrug and high elbows
- - Catch the bar on the front deltoids with elbows forward in rack position
- - Catch above parallel (power position) then stand up
- - Pulling with the arms too early before full hip extension
- - Catching with elbows low - requires significant wrist flexibility to fix
- - Not achieving full hip extension at the top of the second pull
Frequently Asked Questions
How much should a women power clean?
For an average women weighing around 65 kg, an intermediate power clean is approximately 43 kg. Standards vary significantly by bodyweight - use the "Find My Level" tool above with your own bodyweight to get a personalised figure.
What is a good Power Clean for a beginner?
A beginner standard represents a lift achievable after a few months of consistent training - roughly the top 80% of the lifting population. For most exercises, this is around 50–60% of bodyweight for upper body movements and 75–100% for lower body lifts. Check the Beginner column in the table above for the specific number at your bodyweight.
How are Power Clean strength standards calculated?
Standards are derived from aggregated training and competition data across large populations. Each bodyweight bracket has five thresholds - Beginner (top 80%), Novice (top 60%), Intermediate (top 40%), Advanced (top 20%), and Elite (top 5%) - representing where a lifter falls relative to the broader lifting community.
How do I increase my Power Clean?
Progressive overload is the core principle: consistently add small amounts of weight or reps over time. For strength, focus on sets of 3–6 at 80–90% of your 1RM. For hypertrophy, work in the 6–12 rep range. Ensure adequate sleep (7–9 hours), sufficient protein intake (1.6–2.2 g/kg bodyweight), and allow at least 48 hours between sessions targeting the same muscle group.
What is the difference between each strength level?
Beginner: just started training and making rapid linear progress. Novice: 1–2 years of consistent training. Intermediate: several years with structured periodisation. Advanced: competitive or near-competitive level requiring specialised programming. Elite: top-end competitive performance representing the top 5% of the lifting population.