Federal Law Enforcement Fitness Calculator
Secret Service PFT Calculator
Push-ups (1 minute max)
Sit-ups (1 minute max)
Chin-ups (untimed max)
1.5-Mile Run (time)
Secret Service APAT Calculator
Push-ups (1 minute max)
Sit-ups (1 minute max)
Illinois Agility Run (seconds)
Sit and Reach (inches)
1.5-Mile Run (time)
FBI PFT Calculator
Sit-ups (1 minute max)
300-Meter Sprint (time)
Push-ups (continuous, untimed max)
1.5-Mile Run (time)
DEA PTT Calculator
Sit-ups (1 minute max)
Push-ups (1 minute max)
300-Meter Sprint (time)
1.5-Mile Run (time)
ATF PFT Calculator
Sit-ups (1 minute max)
Push-ups (1 minute max)
1.5-Mile Run (time)
USMS FIT Test Calculator
Sit-ups (1 minute max)
Push-ups (1 minute max)
1.5-Mile Run (time)
How These Calculators Work
Each of the six calculators in this hub scores your performance on a specific federal law enforcement fitness test. While every agency has its own events and scoring system, the calculators all follow the same underlying methodology: take your raw performance numbers, compare them against the official scoring tables for your demographic, and translate the result into points, tiers, and pass/fail status.
Step 1: Identify the Right Scoring Table
Most federal law enforcement fitness tests use sex-normed and age-bracketed scoringSeparate scoring tables for males and females, divided into age brackets (typically 10-year groups for federal LE) to account for natural differences in physiology and age-related performance changes.. Before scoring any event, the calculator first determines which table applies to you based on the sex and age you enter.
For example, a 28-year-old male taking the FBI PFT is scored against the FBI's Male, <30 table. The same performance values would score differently for a female, an older male, or someone taking a different agency's test.
One notable exception exists: the Secret Service APAT applies the same standards regardless of age or sex — pre-employment testing assumes all applicants must meet the same baseline of physical readiness before training begins. Agencies use age/sex adjustments for active agents (where careers span decades) but apply uniform standards to applicants.
Step 2: Score Each Event
Each event in a test is scored individually, then combined into a total. The calculators use one of three scoring models depending on the test:
For events where higher is better (push-ups, sit-ups, chin-ups, sit-and-reach), more is always better up to the maximum. For events where lower is better (1.5-mile run, 300m sprint, Illinois agility run), faster is always better down to the minimum-time threshold. The calculator automatically applies the right direction for each event.
Step 3: Combine Events and Apply Pass Criteria
After each event is scored individually, the total score is calculated, and pass/fail status is determined by criteria specific to each agency. There is no universal "pass" rule across federal law enforcement — every agency enforces its own standard:
- Secret Service PFT — Sum of 4 event scores (0–16). Need 6+ total points AND at least 1 point in 3 of 4 events.
- Secret Service APAT — Sum of 5 event scores (0–40). Need 20+ total points AND no zeros on any event.
- FBI PFT — Sum of 4 event scores (-8 to +40). New Agent Trainees need 12+ cumulative points AND at least +1 point in every event.
- DEA PTT — Overall rating equals your lowest event tier. Must meet the minimum on all 4 events to pass.
- ATF PFT — Sum of 3 event scores (0–15). Need 12+ total points AND at least 1 point in each event.
- USMS FIT Test — Must meet the minimum standard on all 3 events. Deputy-level target standards are tracked separately for performance evaluation.
Why the Methodology Matters
Federal law enforcement fitness tests are designed to measure readiness for the job, not just general fitness. The methodology reflects this in several ways:
- Sex and age adjustments exist because federal agents serve long careers — often 20+ years — and the test must evaluate whether someone can meet the physical demands of their role across that lifespan. The standards are calibrated so that a 50-year-old senior agent and a 25-year-old new agent are both held to age-appropriate expectations of operational readiness.
- Per-event minimums ensure no single event can be skipped or sandbagged. A high running score cannot compensate for failing the push-ups component, because real operational demands — pursuing a suspect, controlling a subject, carrying a wounded partner — require both cardiovascular and muscular fitness.
- Applicant vs. active-agent testing reflects different purposes. Applicant tests (like the APATApplicant Physical Abilities Test — Secret Service's pre-employment test with uniform standards regardless of age or sex.) establish a baseline of physical readiness before training begins. Active-agent tests verify that fitness is maintained throughout a career, with age-adjusted standards recognizing that physiology changes over time.
- Tactical and special teams (HRTHostage Rescue Team — the FBI's elite counterterrorism and tactical unit. Members must meet significantly higher fitness standards than standard Special Agents., SOGSpecial Operations Group — the U.S. Marshals Service's tactical unit, requiring elevated fitness standards beyond the standard FIT test., USSS Counter Assault Team) often require significantly higher cumulative scores than the baseline standard, reflecting the greater physical demands of their operational roles.
Data Sources
The scoring tables and pass criteria in this hub are drawn from publicly available information from the following sources:
- U.S. Secret Service careers page & trainee guides — published PFT and APAT scoring structures, tier definitions, and pass criteria.
- FBI Special Agent Selection System (SASS) materials — PFT scoring methodology, the -2 to +10 point system, and New Agent Trainee pass requirements.
- DEA Special Agent recruitment materials — Physical Task Test events, age- and sex-adjusted standards, and tier definitions.
- ATF Special Agent applicant guide — PFT events, point-band scoring, and the 12-point cumulative pass threshold.
- USMS Deputy U.S. Marshal applicant materials — FIT Test events and minimum standards by age and sex.
- FLETC (Federal Law Enforcement Training Centers) documentation — common testing protocols and standards used across multiple federal agencies during basic training.
Federal agencies often publish only the minimum-pass thresholds for their fitness tests, with full scoring tables retained as internal training documents. Where intermediate point levels are not publicly available, the calculators use reasonable estimatesValues derived from publicly available data points, interpolated proportionally between published thresholds and similar tests at comparable agencies. that follow the official scoring methodology. This produces a useful approximation of your performance rather than a guaranteed-accurate official score.
Disclaimer:
This calculator is for training, planning, and reference purposes only. Official scoring is performed by certified test administrators using current agency forms and protocols, and may differ from the values shown here — particularly as agencies periodically revise their scoring tables. For an official assessment of your fitness for federal service or special team selection, consult an agency recruiter, FLETC training cadre, or your unit's fitness coordinator. This tool does not constitute medical, fitness, or law enforcement training advice — always train safely and under appropriate supervision.