What the Test Measures
The bleep test — formally the Multi-Stage Fitness Test — estimates aerobic capacity (VO₂ max) from your ability to sustain progressively increasing running speeds over a 20 metre shuttle course. It is one of the most widely used field tests in sports science because it requires virtually no equipment, can be administered to groups simultaneously, and correlates well with laboratory-measured VO₂ max.
The test is maximal — you run until you can no longer keep pace with the audio beeps. It is this progressive, self-limiting nature that makes it both reliable and honest. You cannot bluff it.
Standard Protocol
- Mark two lines exactly 20 metres apart on a flat, non-slip surface with adequate run-off at each end
- Warm up thoroughly — minimum 10 minutes: light jog, dynamic stretching, progressive strides at increasing effort
- Start the official audio. Position yourself at one line
- On each beep, run to the opposite line. You must reach the line — not arrive early and wait
- If you arrive at the line before the beep, wait at the line until the beep, then turn and run
- Continue until you fail to reach the line on two consecutive shuttles
- Record your final completed level and shuttle (e.g. Level 9, Shuttle 3 = recorded as 9.3)
A note on normative data
Bleep test normative data varies significantly depending on the population tested, age, sex, training status, and the specific study from which the norms were drawn. Publishing a single table of numbers without a specific, citable source would not be appropriate on a site built on qualified, evidence-based principles.
The primary academic references for the bleep test protocol and associated normative data are:
- Ramsbottom, Brewer & Williams (1988) — the original published study establishing the 20 metre multi-stage fitness test protocol and VO₂ max prediction equations
- Léger & Lambert (1982) — the foundational research from which the multi-stage test was developed
- BASES (British Association of Sport and Exercise Sciences) — the UK professional standard for fitness testing protocols. Available at bases.org.uk
Use the VO₂ max estimator below as a guide to your aerobic capacity. For population-specific normative comparisons, consult the BASES guidelines or the original Ramsbottom 1988 paper directly. Your score is most useful as a personal baseline — retest every 6 to 8 weeks and track your own progress over time.
VO₂ Max Estimator — Bleep Test
Enter your result to estimate your VO₂ max using the standard Ramsbottom equation.