8-Foot Up-and-Go: Males, Age 80-84

The 8-foot up-and-go test measures agility and dynamic balance. Specifically, it records the time it takes to stand from a chair, walk 8 feet (2.44 m), turn around, and sit back down. It is part of the Senior Fitness Test battery (Rikli & Jones 1999, n=7,183 US community-dwelling adults aged 60-94). Percentile curves (P5-P95) are from the Senior Fitness Test Manual, 2nd edition (2013), modelled from the same sample. Lower times indicate better performance.

Data source: Rikli & Jones (SFT) (1999) · n=7.2K About this study

8-Foot Up-and-Go Functional Fitness Males 80-84

Percentile Distribution (seconds)

Percentile distribution (seconds) 5th 5th: 9.40 seconds 9.40 25th 25th: 7.60 seconds 7.60 50th 50th: 6.40 seconds 6.40 75th 75th: 5.20 seconds 5.20 95th 95th: 4 seconds 4 0 2.8 5.6 8.4 11.2 14 seconds Percentile distribution (seconds) 5th 5th: 9.40 seconds 9.40 25th 25th: 7.60 seconds 7.60 50th 50th: 6.40 seconds 6.40 75th 75th: 5.20 seconds 5.20 95th 95th: 4 seconds 4 0 2.8 5.6 8.4 11.2 14 seconds
Percentile Value (seconds) Rating
5th 9.4 Excellent
25th 7.6 Above average
50th 6.4 Average
75th 5.2 Below average
95th 4 Poor

What these numbers mean for males aged 80-84

A score around 6.4 seconds is typical (50th percentile) for males in this age group. Times below about 7.6 seconds fall near the 75th percentile or higher, indicating above-average performance (faster is better). Times above about 5.2 seconds fall near the 25th percentile; about 75% of the reference population ran faster.

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

Compare

Related Metrics

Senior Fitness Test Battery

This metric is part of the Senior Fitness Test, a validated 7-test battery for adults aged 60-94.