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Grip Strength Test

Squeeze a hand dynamometer as hard as possible and record the force in kilograms. Straightforward as a test — but the research behind it is remarkable. Grip strength is one of the single strongest predictors of long-term health outcomes, functional independence and all-cause mortality available to fitness testing. It measures more than the hand.

Category: Muscular Strength · Functional Capacity Measures: Maximum handgrip force in kilograms Equipment: Hand dynamometer Level: All — quick and suitable for everyone

Why Grip Strength Matters

Grip strength is not just a measure of how firmly you can hold something. Research has consistently shown it to be one of the most powerful predictors of health outcomes across populations and age groups. A major study published in The Lancet tracking over 140,000 adults across 17 countries found that grip strength was a stronger predictor of cardiovascular disease and all-cause mortality than systolic blood pressure. It is strongly associated with overall muscle mass, functional independence, cognitive decline risk and quality of life in older age.

The practical reason for this is straightforward: grip strength reflects the overall health of the neuromuscular system. It is a proxy for systemic muscle strength, not just hand strength. Someone with strong legs, a strong back and a well-functioning musculoskeletal system will almost always have strong grip strength too. It declines with the same conditions that reduce overall physical capacity — sarcopenia, inactivity, poor nutrition, chronic disease — and it responds to the same interventions.

Protocol — Standard

  1. Adjust the dynamometer handle so the second joints of the fingers fit comfortably around it — the handle width should allow a firm, full squeeze
  2. Stand upright with the arm hanging straight down at the side, elbow slightly bent — not braced against the body
  3. Squeeze the dynamometer as hard as possible for 3 seconds, using maximum effort throughout
  4. Do not swing the arm, hold the breath excessively, or brace against anything during the test
  5. Record the result in kilograms
  6. Rest for 60 seconds minimum between attempts
  7. Perform 3 attempts on each hand and record the best result for each
  8. Report both dominant and non-dominant hand scores — asymmetry between hands is also useful data

Handle position matters

Grip strength varies significantly with dynamometer handle position. The second handle position (fingers bent to approximately 90 degrees) typically produces the highest scores and is the standard position used in most normative data. Keeping the handle at the same position for every test is essential for reliable comparisons over time.

Normative Data — Men (kilograms)

AgeExcellentGoodAverageBelow Average
18–29Over 55kg46–55kg38–45kgUnder 38kg
30–39Over 55kg46–55kg38–45kgUnder 38kg
40–49Over 50kg42–50kg34–41kgUnder 34kg
50–59Over 46kg38–46kg30–37kgUnder 30kg
60–69Over 40kg32–40kg25–31kgUnder 25kg
70+Over 35kg27–35kg20–26kgUnder 20kg

Normative Data — Women (kilograms)

AgeExcellentGoodAverageBelow Average
18–29Over 35kg28–35kg22–27kgUnder 22kg
30–39Over 35kg28–35kg22–27kgUnder 22kg
40–49Over 32kg25–32kg19–24kgUnder 19kg
50–59Over 28kg22–28kg16–21kgUnder 16kg
60–69Over 25kg18–25kg13–17kgUnder 13kg
70+Over 22kg15–22kg10–14kgUnder 10kg

Coaching Points

Left-Right AsymmetryWorth Recording

The dominant hand typically scores 10 to 15 per cent higher than the non-dominant hand. A larger asymmetry than this can indicate injury history, nerve impingement or a strength imbalance worth addressing. Record both hands every time you test and track the ratio as well as the raw scores.

How to Improve ItTraining Transfer

Grip strength improves with any training that requires holding a load — deadlifts, rows, pull-ups, farmer's carries and barbell work all develop grip strength as a byproduct. Specific grip training (towel pull-ups, thick bar work, dead hangs, grip trainers) accelerates improvement further. Any consistent resistance training programme will show measurable grip strength improvements within 8 to 12 weeks.

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