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Plate Count Answer

What plates do I need for 135?

What plates do I need for 135? → one 45 lb plate on each side of a 45 lb bar. Get the exact plates per side, bar type, and the math behind it. Stop guessing at the rack.

Direct Answer

What plates do I need for 135? is one 45 lb plate on each side of a 45 lb bar. Load one 45 lb plate per side.

135 lb - 45 lb bar = 90 lb plates; 90 / 2 = 45 lb per side

135 lb

45 per side

One 45 lb plate each side

95 lb

25 per side

Common warmup

185 lb

45 + 25 per side

Next common jump

The direct barbell math

135 lb is the classic one-plate setup in pound-based gyms. It is usually the first major barbell milestone for bench press, squat, and deadlift.

Why lifters phrase it this way

Lifters usually talk about plates per side because a normal barbell is loaded symmetrically. When someone says “three plates,” they normally mean three large plates on the left sleeve and three matching plates on the right sleeve.

When this answer changes

The total changes if the bar is not 45 lb, if you are using kg plates, if collars are counted, or if the gym uses specialty bars such as trap bars, safety squat bars, or short technique bars.

Frequently asked questions

Does the bar count in the total?

Yes. Barbell totals include the bar. If you ignore the bar, every plate calculation will be off by 45 lb, 20 kg, or whatever your actual bar weighs.

How much is 1 45 plates on each side?

If you mean one 45 lb plate on each side, the total is 135 lb on a standard 45 lb bar.

Is this plates per side or total plates?

These answers use the normal gym convention: plates per side. Two plates means two plates on each sleeve, not two plates total.

Need a custom number?

Use the live calculator when your bar weight, unit, or plate inventory is different.

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