Shoulder External Rotation ROM: Males, Age 25-29

Active shoulder external rotation is the arc of outward rotation of the humerus with the arm held at 90 degrees of abduction. It is a key indicator of posterior capsule flexibility, rotator cuff health, and throwing mechanics. Norms are based on right-shoulder measurements using a digital inclinometer in a large Australian community sample (Gill et al., 2020). Women in this dataset show significantly higher external rotation than men, especially in younger age groups — a well-established finding attributed to differences in shoulder joint laxity and capsule compliance. For women aged 20–29, a substantial proportion reach the instrument ceiling of 90 degrees, so P95 values are capped at 90 degrees.

Data source: Gill 2020 (2020) · n=2.4K About this study

Shoulder External Rotation ROM Flexibility Males 25-29

Percentile Distribution (degrees)

Percentile distribution (degrees) 5th 5th: 35.40 degrees 35.40 25th 25th: 50 degrees 50 50th 50th: 65 degrees 65 75th 75th: 80 degrees 80 95th 95th: 90 degrees 90 0 18 36 54 72 90 degrees Percentile distribution (degrees) 5th 5th: 35.40 degrees 35.40 25th 25th: 50 degrees 50 50th 50th: 65 degrees 65 75th 75th: 80 degrees 80 95th 95th: 90 degrees 90 0 18 36 54 72 90 degrees
Percentile Value (degrees) Rating
5th 35.4 Poor
25th 50 Below average
50th 65 Average
75th 80 Above average
95th 90 Excellent

What these numbers mean for males aged 25-29

A score around 65 degrees is typical (50th percentile) for males in this age group. Scores above about 80 degrees fall near the 75th percentile or higher, indicating above-average performance. Scores below about 50 degrees fall near the 25th percentile, about 75% of the reference population scored higher.

Percentiles show how common a value is, not whether it is healthy.

Compare

Related Metrics