Fitness standards Marine Corps only

Marine PFT/CFT Calculator

Check current Marine PFT and CFT totals so you can see the class result and overall pass status from the published standard.

Best used when you want a factual check on current scores before the next official event.

Your age group. PFT/CFT scoring is age-normed per MCO 6100.13A.

Marine PFT/CFT standards are sex-normed per MCO 6100.13A. Combat arms PMOSes always use male age-normed tables regardless of this field.

Enter your 4-digit PMOS code to apply combat arms standard (MARADMIN 613/25, effective 2026-01-01). Combat arms PMOSes use male age-normed scoring with a 210-point minimum. Leave blank for general standard (min 150).

Choose Pull-ups (primary, higher max score) or Push-ups (alternative, lower max score for males).

Reps completed (pull-ups or push-ups). Options reflect your event, age band, and sex.

Plank hold time in minutes:seconds. Scoring is universal (not age/sex-normed). Max 100 pts at 3:45.

3-mile run time in minutes:seconds. Lower is better. Options reflect your age band and sex.

Movement to Contact 880-yard run time in minutes:seconds. Lower is better.

Ammunition Lift reps (2-minute window, 30 lb ammo can overhead). Options reflect your age band and sex.

Maneuver Under Fire 300-yard shuttle run time in minutes:seconds. Lower is better.

Complete required fields, then select Calculate.

Estimate confidence: PENDING INPUT

Data as of 2025-06-01

Included in estimate

  • Official service fitness scoring standards
  • Your entered event/component scores
  • Published pass/fail or classification thresholds

Not included

  • Commander/program discretion outside published scoring tables
  • Future policy updates after the data date

What this tool is for

Use this page to place current PFT and CFT totals into the published Marine class bands. It keeps the answer narrow and factual: what class are these scores in right now.

Worked example

Example: a Marine can enter current PFT and CFT totals to see whether one test has already slipped into a lower class band before the next recorded event.

When to use it

Use it when you already know the current totals and need a fast class and status check from the published Marine standard.

When not to use it

Do not use it as an official score entry, medical exception guide, or training prescription. Those are separate decisions.

What the result means

The class labels help you see which side is stronger or weaker, while the status line answers the direct question of whether the current pair still clears the standard.

Official sources used

Direct links to the official pages this tool relies on.

Site assumptions

  • Uses the published Marine PFT and CFT class thresholds linked below.
  • Reads the entered totals as the current scores to classify.
  • Does not model event-level drill-down beyond the totals entered.

What is included

  • Current PFT total
  • Current CFT total
  • Published class band and overall status

What is not included

  • Medical profile handling
  • Unit-administered official scoring
  • Training-plan recommendations
  • Any official record update

Verify with

  • Your unit training staff or S-3
  • The linked Marine order and reference hub
  • The latest published Marine guidance if scores will drive a formal action

Frequently asked questions

Is this an official government site?

No. This is an independent planning utility, not an official U.S. Government website. Do not submit CUI, ITAR, classified, or sensitive personal information. Always verify estimates with official sources before making financial decisions.

How accurate are these estimates?

These are planning estimates based on official DFAS, DoD, and service-specific sources. Actual pay may vary based on your specific situation, special pays, tax withholdings, and other factors. Use these tools for planning purposes and verify with your finance office.

When was this data last updated?

Check the source and assumptions sections on this page for the current effective date used by the site. If the linked official pages have changed since then, use the official pages first.

Why show both PFT and CFT classes on one page?

Because Marines often need to see which test is dragging the overall readiness picture. The page keeps both classifications visible so the weak side is obvious.

This estimate uses simplified planning assumptions. Review the linked methodology and official source pages before making financial decisions. Spotted an error or have a suggestion? Send a note.