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Cycling Power-to-Weight Reference

Power-to-weight ratio (W/kg) is the single most useful metric for comparing cycling performance, especially on climbs. This reference provides benchmarks from complete beginner through to professional level, along with typical FTP ranges and what each level means in practical riding terms.

FTP Power-to-Weight Benchmarks

FTP (Functional Threshold Power) is the maximum power you can sustain for approximately one hour. These benchmarks are based on the widely-used classification system originally derived from Andy Coggan's power profiling research.

LevelMen (W/kg)Women (W/kg)Typical FTP (75 kg man)What It Means
Untrained1.5–2.01.2–1.7112–150 WNew to cycling; riding casually
Recreational2.0–2.51.7–2.2150–188 WRegular riding; weekend cyclist
Trained2.5–3.22.2–2.8188–240 WStructured training; sportive rider
Competitive3.2–3.82.8–3.4240–285 WClub racing; regional events
Cat 3/4 Racer3.8–4.23.4–3.8285–315 WSerious amateur racer; regular podiums
Cat 1/2 Racer4.2–4.83.8–4.3315–360 WElite amateur; national-level racing
Domestic Pro4.8–5.54.3–4.8360–413 WContinental team; national champion level
World Class5.5–6.5+4.8–5.5+413–488+ WWorldTour pro; Grand Tour contender

W/kg values are FTP (approximately 1-hour power). Short-duration power (5 sec, 1 min, 5 min) will be significantly higher.

What Each Level Feels Like

W/kg (Men)Climbing (Alpe d'Huez type)Flat Cruising Speed (solo)
2.0Very slow; frequent stops24–27 km/h
3.0Steady; manageable but challenging28–32 km/h
4.0Comfortable pace; ~60–70 min33–37 km/h
5.0Fast; ~45–55 min37–41 km/h
6.0+Elite; under 40 min40+ km/h

How to Test Your FTP

The most common FTP test protocols are:

  • 20-minute test: Ride as hard as you can sustain for 20 minutes. FTP = average power × 0.95.
  • Ramp test: Increase power every minute until failure. FTP = 75% of your peak 1-minute power.
  • 60-minute test: The gold standard — ride at maximum sustainable effort for one hour. Average power = FTP.

Related Calculators

Power benchmarks are approximate and based on published research and coaching data. Individual variation is significant — body composition, cycling experience, altitude and testing protocol all affect results. These figures are most useful for tracking your own progress over time rather than comparing yourself to others.