Roughly 0.4% of people can bench 225 pounds, based on the best estimates available from fitness analysts looking at U.S. population and gym- participation data.

Quick Scoop

  • Across the U.S., estimates suggest about 1.3–1.4 million people , or around 0.4% of the population , can bench 225 lbs for at least one rep.
  • That number mostly comes from men who lift regularly , usually with at least a couple of years of consistent training.
  • For most average men , 225 is an intermediate-to-advanced milestone; for women, it’s considered elite-level strength.

So when you see someone hit 225 in the gym, you’re looking at a lift that very few people in the general population can do.

Why the Percent Is So Low

Fitness writers who’ve tried to quantify this start from a few steps:

  1. Look at total population (around 330–335 million in the U.S.).
  1. Narrow to people with gym memberships (about 64 million), then to those who actually go often (about half of that).
  1. Filter down to:
    • People who lift consistently (at least 2x per week).
    • Mostly men in the 18–34 range.
    • Those heavy and trained enough to realistically bench 225.

After those filters, the estimate lands at about 1.3–1.4 million Americans , which is roughly 0.4% of the population.

How That Looks in Real Life

Think of a big commercial gym at a busy hour:

  • Most members aren’t doing heavy barbell bench.
  • Of the ones who do, only a small fraction are strong and practiced enough to hit two plates per side with good form.
  • Extrapolated out, that’s why 225 is treated as a kind of “2‑plate club” milestone, not something most casual lifters ever reach.

In other words, if you can confidently bench 225, you’re already in a pretty rare group compared to the general population.

Forum & Trend Vibes

When this topic pops up on forums, polls and threads almost always guess low :

“Definitely less than 33%, probably lower than 5%. Old people and kids can’t, most men can’t unless they’ve trained a lot, and barely any women can.”

Those guesses are rough, but they line up with the more detailed calculations that put the real figure well under 5% , closer to that 0.4% mark.

You’ll also see more blog posts and YouTube videos lately breaking down “How many people can bench 225?” , reflecting how this has become a bit of a trending benchmark in gym culture over the past few years.

Multiple Viewpoints

Different ways people talk about it:

  • Data-driven coaches: Emphasize the ~0.4% estimate and the filters (training consistency, bodyweight, age).
  • Gym regulars: Often say it feels rare even among people who lift, especially with strict form and full range of motion.
  • Online polls: Usually guess somewhere in the 1–5% range of the general population, with plenty of debate.

Even if the exact number isn’t perfect, all of these perspectives agree on one main idea: very few people out of everyone walking around can bench 225.

TL;DR

  • Best current estimates: around 0.4% of people can bench 225 lbs.
  • That’s roughly 1.3–1.4 million people in the U.S., mostly reasonably heavy, consistently trained men.
  • In everyday terms, if you’re in the 2‑plate club, you’re already in a small minority of the population.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.