GUIDE · POWERLIFTING · UPDATED MAY 2026

Best workout app for powerlifting in 2026.

The most honest comparison of workout tracking apps for powerlifters in 2026, covering LIFTAG, Strong, Boostcamp, Hevy, and FitNotes, including programming, % of 1RM, and PR tracking.

The short answer

For most powerlifters in 2026, the right pick is LIFTAG, Strong, or Boostcamp. LIFTAG is the most complete free option, with PR history and analytics that do not sit behind a paywall and a tap-to-open flow at partner gyms. Strong is the minimalist choice if all you want is fast set entry. Boostcamp is the right answer when you want to follow a specific named coach’s program rather than write your own.

The rest of this guide explains how to think about choosing between them as a powerlifter, what to actually log on heavy days, and where each app lands honestly. The full eight-app comparison lives on the best workout tracking app page.

What powerlifters actually need from a tracker

Powerlifting tracking is unusual. You care a lot about a few specific things and almost not at all about most of what general workout apps emphasize.

  • Top sets and PR history. You want to know exactly what your last competition single, your last heavy triple, and your last paused-bench top set were. The tracker should make those numbers one tap away.
  • Estimated 1RM trends. Estimated max is approximate but useful: it smooths over rep ranges so you can see whether your squat strength is trending up across a block, not just whether yesterday’s set was heavier than last week’s.
  • Percentage-based loading. Most powerlifting programs prescribe percentages of a current max. The tracker needs a current max per lift and a fast way to log the prescribed set.
  • Long rest timer. Three to five minutes between heavy sets is normal. The timer needs to not interrupt the rest period with notifications and needs to start the moment a set is logged.
  • RPE and RIR support. Most modern powerlifting templates use RPE for autoregulation. The set logger should accept RPE in under one second.
  • Movement-specific PR notifications. When you hit a new PR at any rep range, the tracker should tell you. It is fuel.

Almost everything else is noise. You do not need a step counter or a social feed to pull a heavier deadlift. You need PRs, percentages, and rest.

How the picks stack up

LIFTAG

Free, gym-aware, no analytics paywall.

What it does well

  • Set logging with weight, reps, rest, optional RPE
  • PR history and estimated 1RM per lift
  • Volume and frequency charts per movement
  • Rest timer that comfortably supports five-minute heavy-day rest periods
  • NFC tap or QR scan at partner gyms opens the exact exercise instantly
  • Free on iOS and Android, no required subscription

Where it loses

  • Partner-gym network is still expanding, so the tap-to-open layer triggers only at gyms that have installed LIFTAG tags

Strong

The minimalist single-screen logger.

What it does well

  • Fastest possible set entry on a single screen
  • Apple Watch and Wear OS integration
  • Clean, no-frills UI

Where it loses

  • Free tier limits how many routines you can save
  • No gym integration, no coaching surface

Boostcamp

The home of free coach-built programs.

What it does well

  • Hosts free programs from named lifting coaches
  • Strong if you want to follow a specific named program rather than program your own

Where it loses

  • Set-logging UX is secondary to programming
  • No gym-machine integration

Hevy

Generous free tier with a social layer.

What it does well

  • Generous free tier compared to Strong
  • Social feed and program sharing

Where it loses

  • No gym integration
  • Advanced analytics gated behind paid Pro

FitNotes

The cult-favorite Android-only free logger.

What it does well

  • Fully free, no ads
  • Reliable basic logging and calendar history

Where it loses

  • Android only
  • No iOS, no cross-device sync, no gym integration
  • Aging UI

How to actually log a heavy day

The fastest workable routine on a heavy single or double day looks like this:

  1. Log warm-up set (optional). Most lifters skip this; keep them informal.
  2. Pull up your current PR on that lift before the top set as a reminder of what you are chasing.
  3. Hit the top set. Walk to your bag.
  4. Log the top set: weight, reps, RPE if you train with it. Tap rest timer.
  5. Sit down. The timer counts the rest period.
  6. Repeat for back-off sets. Log every single working set, not just the headline.
  7. At the end of the session, glance at your weekly volume per lift. Adjust the next session if anything looks off.

In LIFTAG, this whole loop happens on one screen. The set entry takes between five and ten seconds per set, and the rest timer starts the moment the set is logged.

Programming considerations

The app does not write your program. You or your coach do. That said, a few notes on how popular powerlifting templates run inside different apps.

5/3/1 and variants

Run cleanly in any tracker. You need a current 1RM per lift, the prescribed percentages, and a way to log AMRAP sets. LIFTAG handles this and tracks PR progression across the block. Boostcamp has a 5/3/1 template if you want a guided version.

RPE-based templates (RTS, Bromley, Calgary Barbell)

You need RPE logging that is not friction. LIFTAG, Strong, and Hevy all accept RPE on set entry. Boostcamp can guide you through specific RPE-prescribed templates.

Conjugate (Westside style)

Heavy day rotates max-effort exercises. You need a tracker that surfaces PR history per variation, such as front squat 3RM, low bar pause squat 3RM, and so on, separately, not lumped together. LIFTAG separates PR history by exact movement, so a switch from low bar to high bar does not muddy the data.

Sheiko and high-frequency Russian templates

These produce high session and weekly volume. The tracker needs a fast set entry so you do not lose ten minutes a session to logging. Strong and LIFTAG are the fastest. FitNotes is also competitive on Android if speed of entry is the only criterion.

Where LIFTAG fits in a powerlifter’s training

LIFTAG was built around the gym itself. For powerlifters the largest gains are not actually the tap-to-open flow on a competition bar, because the bar does not vary. The real gains are:

  • A free PR history and analytics layer that other apps put behind a subscription.
  • A rest timer that does not interrupt long rest periods with marketing notifications.
  • Trainer-platform plumbing so a coach can share blocks and see real set history rather than screenshots.
  • For lifters who train at multiple gyms, a partner-gym map and machine-aware accessory tracking.

If you want LIFTAG, the install path is the App Store or Google Play. If your training is better served by Strong, Boostcamp, or Hevy, the full comparison spells out where each one wins.

Frequently asked questions

What is the best workout tracking app for powerlifting?

For most powerlifters in 2026, LIFTAG, Strong, and Boostcamp are the strongest picks. LIFTAG covers set logging, % of 1RM cues, PR history, and rest timing in a free app and uniquely opens the exact exercise from a tap or scan on the bar or rack at a partner gym. Strong is the minimalist choice. Boostcamp wins when you want to follow a named coach’s program.

Do I need a powerlifting-specific app?

No. The discipline-specific features that matter, including percentage-based loading, RPE, PR tracking, and a rest timer that supports long rest periods, exist in every serious tracker. What separates the best apps for powerlifting is execution: how fast you can log a heavy single between rest sets, and how easily you can see your PR history before a max attempt.

Can LIFTAG handle percentage-based programs like 5/3/1?

Yes. LIFTAG lets you log working sets with weight, reps, RPE, and rest, and shows your PR history and estimated 1RM per lift so percentage-based programs are easy to run. Programs like 5/3/1, Sheiko, Boris Sheiko classics, and conjugate templates work the same way they do in any other tracker: you load your current maxes, the prescribed percentages, and log each top set.

What about Boostcamp versus LIFTAG for powerlifters?

Boostcamp shines when you want a pre-built coach program; it hosts free programs from major lifting coaches. LIFTAG shines when you want a faster, gym-aware set logger and prefer to program your own training or use a coach who delivers plans separately. Many lifters use both: Boostcamp for the program, LIFTAG for the tracking.

Does it matter for powerlifters that LIFTAG has NFC and QR machine tags?

For barbell lifts the difference is smaller than for machines because there is no per-machine variation on a competition bar. The tap-to-open flow still matters when you mix in accessory machines or train at multiple partner gyms with different setups. The bigger gains for powerlifters are LIFTAG’s free analytics and PR history, neither of which is paywalled.

Is LIFTAG free for powerlifters?

Yes. LIFTAG is free to download on iOS and Android with no required paid subscription for set logging, PR tracking, or analytics.

Written by

The LIFTAG team: lifters who train powerlifting and built a workout tracker for it. We benefit when you pick LIFTAG. We do not benefit when you pick Strong, Boostcamp, Hevy, or FitNotes. The guide is updated quarterly.