Athlete performing a hand-release push-up during ACFT calisthenics prep training, demonstrating the strict form required for the Army Combat Fitness Test HRP event

ACFT Calisthenics Prep: Full Plan to Pass the Army Combat Fitness Test (2026)

Last updated: April 2026 — written by James Nolan, Gymnase Tips senior trainer.

The Army Combat Fitness Test (ACFT) is the U.S. Army’s official physical fitness assessment, replacing the Army Physical Fitness Test (APFT) in 2022 — and the calisthenics-friendly events (hand-release push-up, leg tuck/plank, 2-mile run) account for 3 of the 6 graded events. Candidates need a minimum score of 60 points per event to pass, with each event scaled by gender and age. This guide breaks down the ACFT calisthenics events, the official scoring tables, and the 12-week bodyweight training plan that gets a recruit from baseline to passing scores.

The ACFT was designed to test combat-relevant fitness over the APFT’s narrower focus. Calisthenics — done right — covers the strength-endurance, core, and aerobic base the test demands.

Table of Contents

What Is the ACFT?

The Army Combat Fitness Test (ACFT) is the U.S. Army’s gender-neutral, age-adjusted physical fitness test that replaced the APFT in October 2022. It consists of six events designed to assess muscular strength, endurance, power, agility, and aerobic capacity. The Army codifies the ACFT in Field Manual 7-22 (Holistic Health and Fitness).

The test takes approximately 70 minutes to complete and is administered twice per year for active-duty soldiers. Soldiers must score a minimum of 60 points on each event to pass; combat MOSs require higher minimums.

The 6 ACFT Events Explained

1. Three-Repetition Maximum Deadlift (MDL)

Lift a hexagonal trap bar three times at maximum weight. Tests muscular strength. Range: 140-340 pounds depending on score.

2. Standing Power Throw (SPT)

Throw a 10-pound medicine ball backward over the head as far as possible. Tests explosive power. Distance range: 4.5 to 13.5 meters.

3. Hand-Release Push-Up (HRP)

Standard push-up where chest fully contacts the ground and hands lift off momentarily. Tests upper-body strength endurance. Range: 10-60 reps in 2 minutes.

4. Sprint-Drag-Carry (SDC)

50m sprint, 50m sled drag, 50m lateral, 50m kettlebell carry, 50m sprint. Tests anaerobic power and agility. Range: 1:33 to 3:35.

5. Plank (PLK)

Forearm plank, body rigid head to heels. Replaced the leg tuck in 2022. Range: 1:20 to 4:20.

6. Two-Mile Run (2MR)

Standard 2-mile timed run. Tests aerobic capacity. Range: 13:30 to 22:00 depending on score.

ACFT Scoring Standards (Pass = 60 points per event)

Below are minimum (60-point) and high (90-point) thresholds for the calisthenics-relevant events. Full age and gender tables are available in DA Pamphlet 350-50.

EventPass (60 pts)High (90 pts)
Hand-Release Push-Up10 reps40+ reps
Plank1:203:35
Two-Mile Run22:0015:00
Three-Rep Deadlift140 lbs270 lbs
Sprint-Drag-Carry2:281:50
Standing Power Throw4.5 m10 m

Combat MOS soldiers need 70+ on every event. Aim higher than the minimum.

Athlete holding a long forearm plank during ACFT calisthenics prep, demonstrating the core endurance required to score 90+ on the Army Combat Fitness Test plank event
The plank — replaced the leg tuck on the ACFT in October 2022. Pass standard is 1:20; high score is 3:35.

12-Week ACFT Calisthenics Prep Plan

Five days per week. This plan focuses on the calisthenics events (HRP, plank, 2MR) while supporting the other three with bodyweight progressions that transfer.

Phase 1: Weeks 1-4 (Base)

  • Mon: Push-ups (4 × 15 HRP form), planks (3 × 60s), 2-mile run conversational pace
  • Tue: Bulgarian split squats (4 × 10 per leg), hollow holds (3 × 30s), reverse lunges (3 × 15)
  • Wed: Hand-release push-up ladder: 5/10/15/10/5
  • Thu: Plank circuit (front/side/front, 60-45-60s) + 1.5-mile run
  • Fri: Full-body bodyweight circuit, 4 rounds
  • Sat/Sun: Rest or light mobility

Phase 2: Weeks 5-8 (Volume)

Add 30% volume to all sessions. Add 1 day per week of sled-drag simulation (heavy carries) and broad-jump work for the SDC and SPT events.

Phase 3: Weeks 9-12 (Peak)

  • Mock ACFT every 10 days with full event sequencing
  • Cut HRP volume but increase intensity (max sets to failure)
  • Plank work shifts to 4:00+ holds
  • 2-mile run trains at 7:30-8:00/mile pace

ACFT Calisthenics Prep Weekly Schedule

DayFocusDuration
MondayHRP + Plank + 2-Mile Run50 min
TuesdayLower Body + Core40 min
WednesdayHRP Ladder + Mobility40 min
ThursdayPlank Circuit + 1.5-Mile Run40 min
FridayFull-Body Circuit50 min
Sat/SunRest / Mobility20 min

Common ACFT Calisthenics Prep Mistakes

Training standard push-ups instead of HRP form. The hand-release version is significantly harder. Train the actual test movement from day one.

Neglecting the plank. A 4-minute plank is harder than most people think. Build it up across all 12 weeks, don’t expect to test cold.

Running at conversational pace only. Sub-15-minute 2-mile runs require interval training. Add one tempo or interval session per week starting in Phase 2.

Skipping the sprint-drag-carry training. SDC is the event most people fail. Substitute heavy farmer carries and broad jumps if you cannot access a sled.

ACFT Calisthenics Prep FAQ

What is the ACFT pass score?

60 points per event is the minimum to pass for non-combat MOSs. Combat MOSs require 70+ on every event. Total minimum passing score is 360 points across all 6 events.

How many hand-release push-ups do you need to pass the ACFT?

10 reps in 2 minutes scores 60 points (passing). 30 reps scores around 80 points. 40+ reps scores 90+ points. The HRP standard is identical regardless of age or gender as of the 2022 update.

What replaced the leg tuck in the ACFT?

The plank replaced the leg tuck in October 2022. Soldiers hold a forearm plank with body rigid; pass standard is 1:20, high score is 3:35.

Can I train for the ACFT with calisthenics only?

For 4 of the 6 events (HRP, plank, 2MR, and partially SDC), yes. The deadlift and standing power throw require equipment access. For the deadlift specifically, train pistol squats, single-leg deadlifts, and weighted backpack squats as bodyweight transfer exercises.

How long should I train for the ACFT?

12 weeks of structured training takes most untrained adults from baseline to passing scores. Already-fit candidates can hit competitive scores in 6 to 8 weeks. For full optimization across all 6 events, 16 to 24 weeks is realistic.

Is the ACFT harder than the APFT?

Yes, by most measurements. The ACFT tests more dimensions of fitness (strength, power, agility) than the APFT did, requires equipment (deadlift, sled), and adds the sprint-drag-carry — an event no other military fitness test includes. Pass rates dropped 10-15% during the transition period.

For broader military bodyweight conditioning, see our military calisthenics workout guide.

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