What the Test Measures
The plank hold test measures core endurance — the capacity of the deep stabilising muscles of the trunk to maintain a neutral spine position under sustained bodyweight load. It does not measure maximum strength. It measures how long the core can maintain correct function before compensation begins — a hips dropping, hips rising, or spinal flexion occurring.
Core endurance is important across all training and daily movement. Lifts break down when the core fails. Posture deteriorates when the core cannot sustain its stabilising function. Back pain frequently originates from insufficiently developed core endurance rather than inadequate core strength. The plank hold test distinguishes between these qualities and provides a reliable, repeatable baseline.
Protocol — Standard Plank Hold
- Set up a mat on a firm, flat surface
- Assume the forearm plank position: forearms flat on the mat, elbows directly beneath the shoulders, forearms parallel, toes on the floor
- The body must form a straight line from the top of the head to the heels — no raised hips, no dropped hips, no rotation in the torso
- Ensure the neck is neutral — look at a point on the floor approximately 30cm in front of the hands, not directly down and not forward
- Start the stopwatch when the correct position is achieved
- Hold the position until form breaks: hips drop more than 2 to 3cm, hips rise above the line of the body, knees touch the floor, or the hold becomes unsustainable
- Stop the clock at the point of failure — do not attempt to continue after compensation begins
- Record the time in minutes and seconds
Stop at first breakdown — not last
The test ends when correct position can no longer be maintained, not when the hold becomes impossible entirely. Testing core endurance through a compromised position produces an invalid result and increases injury risk. A 45-second plank in perfect position is a better score than a 2-minute plank with sagging hips.
Normative Data
Men
| Age | Excellent | Good | Average | Below Average |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 20–29 | Over 3:00 | 2:00–2:59 | 1:00–1:59 | Under 1:00 |
| 30–39 | Over 2:30 | 1:30–2:30 | 0:50–1:29 | Under 0:50 |
| 40–49 | Over 2:00 | 1:15–2:00 | 0:40–1:14 | Under 0:40 |
| 50–59 | Over 1:45 | 1:00–1:45 | 0:30–0:59 | Under 0:30 |
| 60+ | Over 1:30 | 0:45–1:30 | 0:20–0:44 | Under 0:20 |
Women
| Age | Excellent | Good | Average | Below Average |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 20–29 | Over 2:30 | 1:30–2:30 | 0:50–1:29 | Under 0:50 |
| 30–39 | Over 2:00 | 1:15–2:00 | 0:40–1:14 | Under 0:40 |
| 40–49 | Over 1:45 | 1:00–1:45 | 0:30–0:59 | Under 0:30 |
| 50–59 | Over 1:30 | 0:45–1:30 | 0:20–0:44 | Under 0:20 |
| 60+ | Over 1:00 | 0:30–1:00 | 0:15–0:29 | Under 0:15 |
Coaching Points
The hips must stay level with the shoulders and heels — neither dropped toward the floor nor raised above the line of the body. Both errors reduce the demand on the core stabilisers. Have a second person observe from the side, or set up a phone to film the hold from the side before testing.
Holding the breath artificially maintains intra-abdominal pressure and inflates the score without the core musculature doing the work. Breathe consistently throughout the hold — in through the nose, out through the mouth. The test measures sustainable muscular endurance, not breath-holding capacity.
Allow a minimum of 10 minutes full rest before retesting. Core fatigue from a near-maximal plank hold takes longer to clear than most people assume. For tracking purposes, retest every 4 to 6 weeks under the same conditions — same time of day, same warm-up, same surface.