Presidential Test of Fitness

Independent reference — not affiliated with or endorsed by the U.S. government or the President's Council on Sports, Fitness & Nutrition.

Good grip strength for men aged 60–64

A good grip strength for men aged 60–64 is around 40.3 kg — the median. 52.5 ranks superior; 23.3 or below is below average. See the Grip Strength calculator.

Grip Strength by percentile — men aged 60–64 (kg)
PercentileGrip StrengthRating
10th23.3Below average
25th30.4Below average
50th40.3Good
75th44.9Excellent
90th52.5Superior

Verified source: Hand-grip strength reference values by age & sex — Wang YC, Bohannon RW, Li X, Sindhu B, Kapellusch J — J Orthop Sports Phys Ther, "Hand-Grip Strength: Normative Reference Values… 18 to 85 Years" 48(9):685–693, Table 2 (2018 (U.S. NIH Toolbox, n = 1,232)). Reproduced verbatim and checked cell-by-cell. Dominant-hand percentile values (10th–90th) transcribed verbatim from the primary PDF's Table 2; the men 25–29 mean of 49.7 kg matches the paper's abstract. Official source · Sources & methodology

Frequently asked questions

What is a good grip strength for men aged 60–64?

About 40.3 kg is a good, median (50th-percentile) grip strength for men aged 60–64. 52.5 kg ranks superior (90th percentile), while 23.3 kg or below is below average.

What is the average grip strength for men aged 60–64?

The median grip strength for men aged 60–64 is 40.3 kg — half score above it and half below (dominant-hand grip strength from U.S. national-survey percentiles).