One of the most common reactions when masters athletes first use an age grading calculator is surprise. Not disappointment — surprise. Because their age grade is almost always better than they expected.
We measure ourselves against the wrong benchmark
Most masters athletes compare their current performances to their personal bests from when they were younger. But a 61-second 400m at 52 might represent a higher age grade than a 54-second effort at 28 — because the WMA standard for a 52-year-old is very different from the standard for a 28-year-old.
The standards are genuinely challenging
WMA age standards are set against world records for each age group. A 70% age grade means you’re performing at 70% of the world record level for your age — which is actually remarkable for a club athlete.
Most club athletes are in the 60–75% range
If you’re a regular club competitor, there’s a good chance your age grade sits between 60% and 75%. Athletes who’ve never calculated their age grade often assume they’re at the lower end of the scale. They’re usually not.
What this means for your training
Knowing your real age grade changes how you set goals. Instead of chasing times from 20 years ago, you can set a target age grade that’s genuinely achievable and meaningful.
➡ Find out your real age grade — free at themasterathlete.com/
