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Plate Calculator

lbs
Each Side
Plate Diagram
Enter weight to see plate layout
Total Weight

Loads weight on both sides of the barbell. Always verify plates before lifting. Related: one rep max, , body fat.

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Enter values to see the worked formula.

What Your Result Means

How This Calculator Works

You enter a target weight, select a bar type (45, 35, or 15 lbs), and check which plate sizes you own. The tool subtracts the bar weight, divides by two for each side, then uses a greedy algorithm — starting from the largest available plate — to find an exact combination. If no exact match exists, it scans nearby weights to suggest the closest loadable alternatives above and below your target.

Quick Questions

Why can't I load certain weights?

Plates go on both sides symmetrically, so the loaded weight is always an even multiple of the smallest available plate. With standard plates (down to 2.5 lb), you can load in 5 lb increments above the bar weight. Uncheck unavailable plate sizes to see realistic options for your gym.

Does this work for kilogram plates?

This calculator uses pound-based plates (45, 35, 25, 10, 5, 2.5 lbs). For kilogram plates (20, 15, 10, 5, 2.5, 1.25 kg), you would need to convert or use a metric plate calculator.

What bar weight should I choose?

A standard Olympic barbell is 45 lbs (20 kg). Women's Olympic bars are 35 lbs (15 kg). Training or technique bars are typically 15 lbs. Check your gym's equipment — specialty bars like trap bars or safety squat bars may differ.

Should I always verify plates before lifting?

Yes. Miscounted plates are one of the most common gym mistakes and can cause injury. Always double-check both sides match before unracking, especially at heavier weights.

Sources

Method & review

MethodologyHow we calculate this Reviewed & Updated2026-04 Next review2027-04

Estimate only. Results reflect your inputs and standard formulas. Double-check important decisions independently.