Competition Prep 16 min read Jens Skott

Powerlifting Meet Prep: A 12-Week Guide for Your First Competition

You do not need permission to compete

There is no minimum squat. No deadlift threshold. No invisible line you must cross before you are allowed to step onto a platform and lift in front of judges.

I have watched lifters wait years for the “right time” to enter their first meet. They wanted a 200-kilogram squat first. Or a bodyweight bench. Or to lose five more kilograms. The right time never came, because the goal kept moving.

Here is the truth: you are ready now. If you can squat, bench, and deadlift with reasonable technique, you can compete. Your total does not matter. The lifter squatting 60 kilograms at her first meet is doing something braver than the one squatting 200 kilograms at his twentieth. She is walking into the unknown. He already knows the map.

Sign up. Train for twelve weeks. Show up. That is the entire prerequisite.

Finding a meet

The first step is practical, not philosophical. You need to find a competition, register, and pay the entry fee. Do this before you start your prep. Having a date on the calendar turns training from abstract to concrete — every session now points somewhere.

Federations

In the UK, the main federations are:

IPF (via British Powerlifting / BPU): The International Powerlifting Federation is the oldest and most widely recognised governing body. Drug-tested. Strict equipment rules. If you want the most traditional, well-organised experience, start here.

WRPF (via WRPF GB): The World Raw Powerlifting Federation. Less rigid on equipment, generally a more relaxed atmosphere. Good for a first meet if you want a slightly less formal environment.

BPU: British Powerlifting Union. Affiliated with the WPC. Offers both tested and untested divisions. More equipment categories.

For a first meet, the federation matters less than the act of competing. Pick whichever has an event near you within the next three to four months. You can switch federations later. Nobody is signing a lifetime contract.

Weight classes

Every federation uses standardised weight classes. You will compete against lifters of similar bodyweight. Common classes for men include 66 kg, 74 kg, 83 kg, 93 kg, 105 kg, 120 kg, and 120+ kg. For women: 47 kg, 52 kg, 57 kg, 63 kg, 69 kg, 76 kg, 84 kg, and 84+ kg. These vary slightly between federations.

Do not think about weight classes yet. Compete at whatever you weigh. We will address this later.

The 12-week structure

Twelve weeks is enough time to peak properly without burning out. The structure follows a logical arc: build a base, intensify the load, sharpen the skill, then rest. This is how a blacksmith works a blade — heat it slowly, hammer it with precision, refine the edge, then let it cool before the test.

Phase 1: Accumulation (weeks 1-4)

This is the foundation. High volume, moderate intensity. You are building work capacity, reinforcing technique under manageable loads, and stocking the reservoir of fitness that will carry you through the harder weeks ahead.

The focus is on the competition lifts — squat, bench press, deadlift — plus close variations. Paused squats, close-grip bench, deficit deadlifts. These accessories shore up weak positions and teach your body to be strong across the full range of motion.

You are not chasing heavy singles here. You are laying bricks.

Phase 2: Intensification (weeks 5-8)

The volume drops. The weight climbs. You shift from building capacity to building confidence under heavier loads.

This is where the bar starts to feel real. Triples and doubles at 80 to 90 percent. Your body learns what heavy feels like — the way the bar bends across your back at 85 percent, the way your grip tightens on a deadlift that demands respect. These sensations matter. On meet day, nothing should surprise you.

Accessories reduce to only what serves the competition lifts directly. Strip away the decoration. What remains is the structure.

Phase 3: Peaking (weeks 9-11)

Low volume. High intensity. Singles and doubles at 90 percent and above. This is the sharpening phase — you are honing the edge of the blade, not adding more steel.

Every rep should look like a meet attempt. Competition pauses on the bench. Walk-outs on the squat. Commands, if you have a training partner who can call them. Specificity is everything now.

You will feel tired. You will feel slow. This is normal. The fatigue is masking your fitness. Trust the process.

Phase 4: Taper (week 12)

The lightest week of the entire prep. You are not building anything. You are letting the accumulated fatigue dissipate so your true strength emerges on meet day.

Hit your openers early in the week — light, fast, confident. Then rest. Sleep. Eat. Walk. Stay off your feet. The work is done. The steel has been forged. Now you let it cool.

Weekly programming overview

WeekPhaseSets x Reps (main lifts)Intensity (% of max)RPE range
1-2Accumulation4-5 x 5-670-75%6-7
3-4Accumulation4-5 x 4-575-80%7-8
5-6Intensification4 x 3-480-85%7-8
7-8Intensification3-4 x 2-385-90%8-9
9-10Peaking2-3 x 1-290-95%8-9
11Peaking2 x 195-100%9
12Taper1-2 x 1-280-85% (openers)6-7

These are guidelines, not commandments. Your body will tell you when to push and when to hold. Listen.

Attempt selection

This is the most important skill on meet day. More lifters fail because of poor attempt selection than poor strength. You get three attempts on each lift. Nine total. Every one of them should be chosen before you arrive at the venue.

The logic

First attempt (opener): A weight you can hit on your worst day. Tired, nervous, in a singlet, with judges you have never met. This should be 85 to 90 percent of your best gym lift — not your all-time personal record, but a weight you have hit cleanly in training during the prep. The purpose of the opener is to get you on the board. Nothing else.

Second attempt: A solid, confident lift. Roughly 95 percent of your training max. This should feel like hard work but not a battle. It builds momentum into the third attempt.

Third attempt: Your best realistic lift for the day. 100 to 102.5 percent of your training max. This is where you reach, but not where you gamble. A small personal record is better than a dramatic miss.

Example attempt selection

For a lifter with a gym max squat of 160 kg, bench of 100 kg, and deadlift of 200 kg:

LiftGym max1st attempt2nd attempt3rd attempt
Squat160 kg140 kg (87.5%)152.5 kg (95%)162.5 kg (101.5%)
Bench100 kg87.5 kg (87.5%)95 kg (95%)102.5 kg (102.5%)
Deadlift200 kg175 kg (87.5%)190 kg (95%)205 kg (102.5%)

Write these numbers down. Bring them to the meet. Do not deviate from the plan based on how the warm-up room feels. Adrenaline is a liar.

The only exception: if your opener moves like an empty bar, you may consider a slightly more aggressive second attempt. But even then, conservatism wins more meets than bravery.

Equipment

You do not need much, and most of it is inexpensive. What you do need must comply with your federation’s rules.

Singlet: Required in every federation. This is the one-piece suit you lift in. Buy a powerlifting-specific singlet — they are cut for the movements and meet the thickness regulations. Expect to pay around 30 to 50 pounds.

Belt: A 10 mm or 13 mm lever or prong belt. Most federations allow belts up to 10 cm wide and 13 mm thick. If you already train with a belt, use the same one. Do not buy a new belt two weeks before the meet — it needs to be broken in.

Knee sleeves: Allowed in most raw divisions. 7 mm neoprene is standard. They provide warmth and a small amount of rebound out of the hole. Knee wraps are a different category entirely and are not permitted in raw or classic divisions.

Wrist wraps: Useful for bench press and sometimes squats. Most federations allow wraps up to 60 cm in length. Stiffer wraps provide more support but less feel.

Shoes: Flat-soled shoes for deadlifts — wrestling shoes, Converse, or deadlift slippers. Heeled shoes for squats if that is what you train in. You can bench in either. Do not wear running shoes.

Underwear: Some federations are strict about underwear specifications. Check the rules. This is not a joke — lifters have been turned away at equipment check for the wrong briefs.

Check your federation’s approved equipment list before buying anything. IPF-affiliated meets have a specific list of approved brands and models.

Weight cut or not

Do not cut weight for your first meet. This is not a suggestion. It is a directive.

Cutting weight adds stress, reduces performance, and distracts from the things that actually matter — your lifting and your experience. You will lift more at your natural bodyweight than you will after shedding three kilograms of water in a sauna the night before.

Compete at your walking-around weight. If you sit between two weight classes, enter the higher one. Your total will be better, your experience will be better, and you will actually enjoy the day.

Water cuts and weight manipulation are tools for experienced competitors chasing specific qualifying totals or records. They are not for the lifter standing on a platform for the first time. Eat breakfast. Drink water. Lift heavy.

Meet day logistics

The day itself has a rhythm. Knowing the sequence removes the guesswork and lets you focus on the lifting.

Weigh-in

Most meets offer a two-hour or twenty-four-hour weigh-in window before lifting begins. You step on a scale, your weight is recorded, and you are assigned to a flight — a group of lifters who will rotate through their attempts together.

Bring your singlet and any equipment you want checked. The equipment check happens at or around weigh-in. Have your rack heights written down for squat and bench.

Rack heights

Know your squat and bench rack heights before you arrive. Set them at your gym in the weeks leading up to the meet and write them down. “One below the second notch” is not useful in a different gym with different racks. Most federations number their rack positions — find out the system and test it during warm-ups.

Warm-up room

The warm-up room is where you prepare for each lift. It is shared with other lifters, it is chaotic, and it is often poorly equipped. Bring a training partner or handler if you can — someone who can load your bar, time your warm-ups, and tell you when your flight is approaching the platform.

Start warming up approximately fifteen minutes before your flight is called. Work up to your opener methodically. Do not rush, but do not dawdle. Time your last warm-up so it finishes about five minutes before you are due on the platform.

Flight order and commands

Lifts proceed in ascending weight order within each flight. The lightest openers go first. You will be told when you are “on deck” (next) and “in the hole” (two lifters away).

The commands are specific and must be obeyed. A lift performed without waiting for the command will be disqualified.

Squat: Unrack the bar and stand still. The head referee says “squat.” Descend to depth, stand up, hold. “Rack.” Return the bar to the uprights.

Bench press: Unrack and lock out. Lower to the chest and hold. “Press.” Push the bar to lockout. “Rack.” Return the bar.

Deadlift: No start command — lift when ready. Stand with the bar at lockout, hips and knees locked. “Down.” Return the bar to the floor under control.

Practise these commands in training. Have a partner call them. The pause on bench press, in particular, is longer than you expect. Get comfortable with it.

Mental preparation

Nerves are not a problem. They are fuel. Every lifter on the platform is nervous. The ones who perform well are not the ones without fear — they are the ones who have a plan.

Your plan is your attempt selection sheet. You wrote the numbers down weeks ago. You trained for those numbers. Now you execute.

Do not make decisions on the platform. Do not look at the scoreboard and recalculate. Do not watch the lifter before you hit a massive squat and decide to jump your second attempt by five kilograms. The plan exists to protect you from the adrenaline that makes everything feel possible and nothing feel dangerous.

Between attempts, stay warm. Keep your headphones in if that helps. Eat and drink. Do not watch every single lift — it drains your energy. Find a quiet corner, stay in your own head, and emerge when it is time to lift.

Trust the training. The twelve weeks happened. The strength is there. Your only job now is to not get in its way.

Common first-meet mistakes

I have seen every one of these. Most of them are preventable.

Cutting weight: Already covered, but worth repeating. Do not do it. You will lift less, feel worse, and remember the experience as suffering rather than triumph.

Opening too heavy: The single most common mistake. Your opener should be a certainty, not a challenge. If there is any doubt in your mind about whether you can hit it, the weight is too high. Go lighter. A 9-for-9 day at conservative weights beats a 5-for-9 day with two missed openers.

Changing the plan mid-meet: You hit your opener easily and now you want to jump ten kilograms to your second attempt instead of the planned five. Do not. The plan was made with a clear head. Stick to it.

Not eating or drinking enough: Meet days are long. You might be at the venue for six to eight hours. Bring food — sandwiches, rice, bananas, whatever you eat normally. Bring water and a sports drink. Eat between lifts. You are an athlete performing nine maximal efforts over several hours. Your body needs fuel.

Overthinking: You have prepared. The training is done. Stop analysing your technique, your grip width, your stance. Lift the way you have been lifting for twelve weeks. This is not the day to experiment.

Ignoring warm-up timing: Starting too early means you cool down before your attempt. Starting too late means you rush and miss your opener. Time it. Practise it.

Wearing new equipment: Do not debut a new belt, new shoes, or a new singlet on meet day. Everything should be tested in training first.

Frequently asked questions

How strong do I need to be to enter a powerlifting meet?

There is no minimum. Federations do not set strength requirements, and neither should you. The platform does not care about your total — it only asks that you attempt the lift. Some of the loudest cheers at any meet come for the lifter grinding out a 40-kilogram bench press at their first competition. Show up. Lift. That is enough.

Which federation should I choose for my first meet?

Whichever one has a competition near you in the next few months. For most UK lifters, British Powerlifting (IPF-affiliated) offers the widest network of regional competitions. But any federation will give you a proper meet experience. Pick based on proximity and date, not prestige.

Do I need a coach or handler on meet day?

You do not need one, but having someone there — even a training partner — makes the day significantly easier. They can load your warm-up bar, track the flight order, remind you to eat, and keep you on schedule. If you go alone, introduce yourself to other lifters. The powerlifting community is generous with help, especially to first-timers.

What happens if I bomb out?

Bombing out means failing all three attempts on a single lift, which disqualifies you from posting a total. It happens. It is not the end of the world. The most common cause is opening too heavy. If you follow conservative attempt selection — 85 to 90 percent of your training max for your opener — the probability of bombing is very low. And if it does happen, you learn from it, you adjust, and you enter another meet.

How do I pick my weight class?

For your first meet, you do not pick a weight class. You weigh in at whatever you weigh, and the scale assigns you to a class. Do not manipulate your weight. If you are 76 kilograms, you compete at 83. If you are 84, you compete at 93. The class only matters when you are chasing qualifying totals or records, which is not a first-meet concern.

What should I eat on meet day?

Whatever you normally eat. This is not the day to try a new nutrition strategy. A solid breakfast two to three hours before lifting — oats, eggs, toast, whatever sits well. Pack food for the day: sandwiches, rice cakes, fruit, protein bars. Sip water constantly. Have a sports drink for later in the day when fatigue sets in. Avoid anything heavy or unfamiliar. Your stomach is not interested in surprises when your nervous system is running at full power.

Can I use SteelRep to prepare for a meet?

Yes. The Founders Competition Foundation program is free and covers the base-building phase. For targeted peaking on individual lifts, the Founders Squat Peak, Founders Bench Peak, and Founders Deadlift Peak programs (available with Pro) are built specifically for competition preparation.

The platform is waiting

Twelve weeks is not a long time. It is long enough to sharpen what you have already built, but short enough that the finish line stays visible from the start. You do not need more strength. You do not need more time. You need a date, a plan, and the willingness to step onto a platform and test yourself under the bar.

Pick your meet. Write your numbers. Train with purpose.

Then step up and lift.

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