Brotistic · loading chart

Starting Strength Calculator

A/B workouts · every plate · exportable

Enter your working weights and get both Starting Strength workouts — A and B — with squat, bench, press and deadlift, plate loading drawn as the bar, and the linear progression rules laid out. No sign-up. Nothing leaves your phone.

Your working weights
↳ Calculated entirely in your browser. No data is sent anywhere, ever.

How Starting Strength works

Starting Strength is Mark Rippetoe's novice linear-progression program — arguably the most influential beginner barbell routine ever written. It's built on a handful of full-body lifts, run three times a week, with the bar getting a little heavier every single session. Two workouts, A and B, cover everything.

The A/B workouts

  • Workout A — squat 3×5, bench 3×5, deadlift 1×5
  • Workout B — squat 3×5, press 3×5, deadlift 1×5

You alternate them across three non-consecutive days a week — Mon A, Wed B, Fri A, then the next week opens with B (Mon B, Wed A, Fri B) and so on. Squat appears every session, the two presses trade off, and the deadlift anchors each workout. This calculator shows both with your current weights loaded.

Progression

Add weight every session you complete the reps: 2.5 kg / 5 lb on the upper-body lifts (bench, press) and 5 kg / 10 lb on squat and deadlift while you're early. Because squat is trained every session, it climbs twice as often as each press — that's by design. As the weights get heavy the jumps shrink (microplates help) and eventually you stall.

Why deadlift is one set

The deadlift is run as a single set of five. One heavy set is plenty of stimulus, and stacking three would wreck recovery for the squats waiting two days later. It's the one lift that doesn't get three work sets, and that's deliberate.

A note for novices

This is a novice program, and the magic — adding weight literally every session — only lasts while you're new. Those linear gains don't run forever; when the jumps stop sticking across multiple attempts, it's time to move to an intermediate program with weekly rather than per-session progression. Start lighter than your ego wants and ride the climb as long as it lasts.

while you're here

I'm also building a thing. It's an offline strength tracker I made for myself — logs your sets, reads out your trends and PRs, and runs entirely on your phone. It's not finished, and to be clear: I don't want your data — there's no account and no server.

Just a tool to keep you organized and a little more honest about your numbers. Want to test it? Come say hi.