Health & Fitness

How Strength Scores Are Calculated

How Wilks, Wilks-2, and DOTS powerlifting scores work — polynomial formulas, coefficients, strength levels, and percentile rankings.

Verified against Wilks formula coefficients (1995) on 15 Feb 2026 Updated 15 February 2026 4 min read
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சுருக்கம்

Strength scoring formulas compare powerlifting performance across different bodyweights and sexes. Instead of raw totals, they produce a single number that answers: “pound for pound, how strong are you?” The three most common systems are Wilks (1995), Wilks-2 (2020), and DOTS (2019).

இது எவ்வாறு செயல்படுகிறது

All three formulas share the same basic structure: divide your powerlifting total by a bodyweight-dependent polynomial, then multiply by a scaling constant. The polynomial is fitted to competitive data so that a given score means roughly the same “level” regardless of whether you weigh 60 kg or 120 kg.

  • Wilks (1995) — the original, developed by Robert Wilks (Powerlifting Australia). A 5th-degree polynomial with a 500× multiplier. Used historically by the IPF and most federations.
  • Wilks-2 (2020) — an update by Robert Wilks with rebalanced coefficients and a 600× multiplier. Better alignment between men’s and women’s scores, and improved accuracy at extreme bodyweights.
  • DOTS (2019) — created by Tim Konertz (BVDK, Germany). A 4th-degree polynomial with a 500× multiplier. Designed to fix bias at extreme bodyweights. Adopted by the BVDK and other federations.

The formulas

Score = Total × C / polynomial(bodyweight)

Where

Total= Powerlifting total — sum of best squat, bench press, and deadlift (kg)
C= Scaling constant — 500 for Wilks and DOTS, 600 for Wilks-2
polynomial= Gender-specific polynomial in bodyweight (5th-degree for Wilks/Wilks-2, 4th-degree for DOTS)

Wilks polynomial (5th degree)

denom = a + b×BW + c×BW² + d×BW³ + e×BW⁴ + f×BW⁵

CoefficientMaleFemale
a−216.0475144594.31747775582
b16.2606339−27.23842536447
c−0.0023886450.82112226871
d−0.00113732−0.00930733913
e7.01863 × 10⁻⁶4.731582 × 10⁻⁵
f−1.291 × 10⁻⁸−9.054 × 10⁻⁸

Wilks score = Total × 500 / denom

Wilks-2 polynomial (5th degree, 600× multiplier)

Same polynomial structure, new coefficients fitted to 2011–2019 IPF championship data.

Wilks-2 score = Total × 600 / denom

DOTS polynomial (4th degree)

denom = A + B×BW + C×BW² + D×BW³ + E×BW⁴

CoefficientMaleFemale
A−307.75076−57.96288
B24.090075613.6175032
C−0.1918759221−0.1126655495
D0.00073912930.0005158568
E−0.000001093−0.0000010706

DOTS score = Total × 500 / denom

Strength level classification

Strength levels are based on Wilks score and approximate percentiles among trained lifters:

LevelWilks thresholdApproximate percentile
World Class500+Top 0.1%
Elite450–499Top 1%
Advanced370–449Top 5%
Intermediate280–369Top 20%
Novice200–279Top 50%
BeginnerBelow 200

தீர்க்கப்பட்ட உதாரணம்

Male lifter, 83 kg bodyweight, 500 kg total

1

Calculate the Wilks polynomial denominator

−216.05 + 16.26×83 + (−0.00239)×83² + (−0.00114)×83³ + 7.02e−6×83⁴ + (−1.29e−8)×83⁵ = 749.06

= 749.06

2

Calculate Wilks score

500 × 500 ÷ 749.06 = 333.75

= 333.75

3

Classify strength level

333.75 falls in 280–369 range → Intermediate

= Intermediate

Result

Wilks = 334, Wilks-2 = 401, DOTS = 338 — Intermediate (top ~20% of trained lifters)

உள்ளீடுகள் விளக்கம்

  • Sex — male or female. Each scoring system uses different polynomial coefficients for each sex.
  • Bodyweight — your body weight in kg or lbs. This is the key variable in the scoring polynomial.
  • Powerlifting total — the sum of your best squat, bench press, and deadlift (in competition or training).
  • Individual lifts (optional) — squat, bench, and deadlift separately, for per-lift Wilks breakdown.

வெளியீடுகள் விளக்கம்

  • Wilks score — the primary output, most widely recognised in the powerlifting community
  • Wilks-2 score — the 2020 update, scores ~20% higher than original Wilks due to the 600× multiplier
  • DOTS score — an alternative that handles extreme bodyweights more fairly
  • Strength level — Beginner through World Class classification based on Wilks score
  • BW ratio — total divided by bodyweight (a simpler “how many times your bodyweight” metric)
  • Percentile — estimated ranking among trained lifters based on Wilks score

அனுமானங்கள் மற்றும் வரம்புகள்

  • Drug-tested vs untested — strength level thresholds are derived from drug-tested competitions. Untested lifters may exceed these benchmarks more easily.
  • Competition vs gym lifts — competition totals follow strict judging standards (depth, pause, lockout). Gym totals may not be directly comparable.
  • Bodyweight range — the polynomials are fitted to competitive data roughly in the 40–200 kg range. Scores at extreme bodyweights outside this range may be less meaningful.
  • Single-ply / multi-ply equipment — these scores are designed for raw (unequipped) or single-ply lifting. Multi-ply equipped totals will produce inflated scores.
  • Age not accounted for — none of these formulas adjust for age. A 20-year-old and a 60-year-old with the same total and bodyweight get the same score.
  • Scores are relative — a Wilks score of 400 means different things in different eras as the overall talent pool changes.

சரிபார்ப்பு

Test caseSexBW (kg)Total (kg)WilksWilks-2DOTSLevel
Intermediate maleMale83500334401338Intermediate
Advanced femaleFemale63350376448376Advanced
Near-elite maleMale105750448536452Advanced

All values verified by manual polynomial calculation using the official coefficients.

Sources

Academic
Academic
Industry
Strength Level standardsaccessed 15 Feb 2026
wilks dots wilks-2 powerlifting strength coefficient