One of the most practically useful things to understand during Achilles rupture recovery is how different activities compare in terms of the actual force they place through the tendon. The difference between walking slowly in a boot and landing from a box jump is not just intuitive — it is measurable, and the research has measured it.

This article compiles the best available force data across a wide range of activities, expressed as multiples of body weight (BW). A person weighing 80 kg has a body weight of approximately 785 N. An activity generating 3× BW therefore places roughly 2,355 N through the tendon at peak load. These are peak forces during the activity — not sustained loads.

Forces are derived from in vivo tendon transducer studies, inverse dynamics calculations from motion capture and force plate data, and ultrasound-based musculoskeletal models. Where ranges are reported, the table shows the published range and midpoint.

How to Read This Table

BW = body weight. A value of 3× BW for an 80 kg person = approximately 2,350 N peak tendon force. Forces are peak values during the activity, not sustained. Load tier classifications (Very Low → Very High) are based on clinical rehabilitation literature and reflect the activity's position in standard Achilles rehab progression frameworks. Filter by category or sort any column by clicking the header.

  1. The Force Table
  2. How to Use This Table in Recovery
  3. References
  4. Related Reading