LiftLog / Tools

Free Plate Calculator
Bar Loading Made Simple

Enter your target weight, choose your bar, and instantly see which plates to load on each side — with a visual bar graphic.

Calculate Plates Per Side

Built into LiftLog — the plate calculator is a tap away on every set. Pre-fills from your logged weight, remembers your bar and plate inventory.

How Plate Loading Works

Every barbell lift starts with the bar itself. In most gyms, the standard Olympic barbell weighs 45 lb (20 kg). Women's barbells are typically 35 lb (15 kg), and technique/training bars are 15 lb (7.5 kg). The bar weight is always included in your total — a "135 lb squat" means a 45 lb bar plus two 45 lb plates.

Plates are loaded symmetrically: whatever you put on the left side, you put on the right side. The calculator subtracts bar weight from your target, divides by two to find weight per side, then uses a greedy algorithm to find the fewest plates that reach that number.

Standard Plate Denominations

Imperial (lb)Metric (kg)Color (standard)
4520Blue
3515Yellow
2510Green
105White
52.5Red
2.51.25Black
1.250.5Silver

IPF-standard color coding (Olympic weightlifting colors) are slightly different but this table covers most powerlifting and commercial gym equipment.

Common Loaded Weights Quick Reference

These are the most common barbell weights and their plate configurations on a 45 lb bar:

Total WeightPlates Per SideNotes
45 lbBar onlyWarm-up / technique
95 lb25Common beginner squat start
135 lb45"One plate" — squat milestone
185 lb45 + 25Solid beginner/intermediate
225 lb45 × 2"Two plates" — significant milestone
275 lb45 × 2 + 25Intermediate squat range
315 lb45 × 3"Three plates" — strong squat
405 lb45 × 4"Four plates" — elite level

Why Plate Loading Math Matters

Loading errors are one of the most common gym mistakes — and they're completely avoidable. Loading 225 when you intended 235, or forgetting the bar weight and programming 200 lb when you actually hit 155 lb, distorts your training log and your PR tracking.

Good plate math also speeds up gym flow. Knowing exactly which plates to grab before you walk to the rack eliminates the "calculate in my head while standing there" moment that wastes time between sets.

Micro-loading (using fractional plates of 1.25 lb / 0.5 kg) is worth doing, especially on overhead press and bench where the jump from 5 lb to 10 lb per side is large. Adding 2.5 lb total to a 135 lb OHP each week is a 1.9% increase — aggressive but manageable for most lifters. Jumping 10 lb per session (7.4%) stalls beginners quickly.

Bar Loading Safety Tips

  • Always use collars. Plates sliding during a squat or deadlift is a serious injury risk.
  • Load symmetrically. Uneven loading causes bar whip and lateral instability.
  • Check the math twice on heavy lifts. Miscounting during a max effort attempt is more common than you'd think.
  • Know your gym's equipment. Not all "45 lb plates" weigh exactly 45 lb. Cheap plates can be off by 1–3 lb, which matters for accurate 1RM tracking.
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