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Vertical Jump Test

Stand next to a wall, mark your standing reach, jump as high as you can and mark the highest point. The difference between the two marks is your vertical jump. One of the most fundamental measures of lower body explosive power used across sports science, professional scouting and athletic development worldwide.

Category: Lower Body Power · Explosiveness Measures: Vertical jump height in centimetres Equipment: Wall · Chalk or sticky tape · Tape measure Level: All — from beginner to advanced

What the Test Measures

The vertical jump test measures lower body explosive power — the ability to generate maximum force rapidly through the legs and transfer it into upward movement. It is one of the most widely used athletic performance tests in sports science, used at the NFL Scouting Combine, NBA Draft Combine, in football academies and in research settings globally.

Explosive power is produced predominantly by fast-twitch muscle fibres and declines faster with age than aerobic capacity or general strength. The vertical jump test provides a direct, simple measure of this quality — one that responds well to training and serves as a useful indicator of overall athletic capacity. The test also pairs naturally with the Broad Jump to give a complete picture of lower body power in both vertical and horizontal directions.

How to Perform the Test
WALL Standing reach Step 1 — Stand next to wall, reach up as high as possible Step 2 — Bend knees, swing arms back Standing reach Jump peak Step 3 — Jump and touch the wall at peak height Vertical jump = difference in cm Standing reach Jump peak Step 4 — Measure the difference between the two marks

Protocol — Wall Method

  1. Stand side-on next to a smooth wall in bare feet or flat-soled shoes
  2. With your dominant arm raised fully, mark the highest point you can reach with your fingertips while standing flat-footed — this is your standing reach height
  3. Step slightly away from the wall, then jump as high as possible from a two-footed standing position, touching the wall at the peak of the jump
  4. The jump should use a countermovement — bend the knees, swing the arms and explode upward — not a static squat jump
  5. Mark the highest point of contact on the wall
  6. Measure the distance between the standing reach mark and the jump mark — this is your vertical jump height in centimetres
  7. Perform 3 attempts and record the best result
  8. Rest fully between attempts — explosive power requires full recovery between maximal efforts

Countermovement vs static jump

The countermovement jump — bending the knees before exploding upward — produces significantly higher scores than a static squat jump because it stores elastic energy in the tendons and muscles during the downward phase. Always use the same technique across tests for reliable comparisons. The countermovement method is standard in most normative data.

Normative Data — Men (centimetres)

AgeExcellentGoodAverageBelow Average
18–29Over 65cm50–65cm40–49cmUnder 40cm
30–39Over 60cm45–60cm35–44cmUnder 35cm
40–49Over 55cm40–55cm30–39cmUnder 30cm
50–59Over 45cm35–45cm25–34cmUnder 25cm
60+Over 35cm25–35cm18–24cmUnder 18cm

Normative Data — Women (centimetres)

AgeExcellentGoodAverageBelow Average
18–29Over 50cm40–50cm30–39cmUnder 30cm
30–39Over 45cm35–45cm25–34cmUnder 25cm
40–49Over 40cm30–40cm22–29cmUnder 22cm
50–59Over 35cm25–35cm18–24cmUnder 18cm
60+Over 28cm20–28cm14–19cmUnder 14cm

Coaching Points

Chalk or Tape on FingertipsPractical Tip

Chalk or a small piece of chalk dust on the fingertip makes the wall mark clear and precise. Alternatively, use a vertical jump mat or a specific jumping board if available. Without a clear mark the measurement is unreliable. The consistency of the marking method matters more than the method itself.

Improving the ScoreHighly Trainable

Vertical jump responds well to strength training (particularly squats and hip hinges), plyometric training (box jumps, depth jumps, jump squats) and sprint training. Improvements of 5 to 10cm over an 8 to 12 week training block are achievable with consistent effort. Pair with the Broad Jump for a complete lower body power profile.

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