Dunk Calculator UK (Vertical Jump & Reach)
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Your Dunk Profile
How This Dunk Calculator Helps You
If you are not sure whether your jump is enough to dunk, this calculator gives you a clear target in seconds. Designed for basketball players of all levels, our tool removes the guesswork by calculating the exact vertical leap you need based on your height, standing reach, and dunk goals.
How to Use the Dunk Calculator
Using the tool is incredibly straightforward:
Select Metric (cm) or Imperial (ft/in).
Input your height or standing reach. If you only know your height, we will estimate your standing reach automatically.
It defaults to the standard 10-foot professional rim, but you can adjust it for youth sizes.
Optional, but providing it shows your "Dunk Gap" — exactly how many inches or cm you need to add to your game.
Instantly discover if you can dunk, touch the rim, or what you need to improve first.
What Your Result Means
Required vertical jump
This is the pure jumping power you need to elevate your fingers high enough to complete your chosen dunk type. To touch the rim, you need less vertical than completing a clean one-hand slam dunk.
Dunk gap
If you entered your current vertical jump, the dunk gap tells you the difference between where you are now and where you need to be. A small gap means you should focus on technique and ball handling, while a larger gap requires dedicated strength training.
Maximum reach
This is the absolute highest point your hand touches at the peak of your current vertical jump.
Hang time & Take-off velocity
Advanced metrics that showcase the physics of your jump. Take-off velocity measures how fast you leave the floor, and hang time shows how long you remain airborne based on standard gravitational pull.
How to Measure Standing Reach
Your standing reach is far more critical for dunking than your overall height. To measure it accurately:
Stand flat-footed facing a wall or backboard.
Reach one hand as high as possible without lifting your heels off the ground.
Mark the highest point your fingertips touch.
Measure the distance from the floor to that mark.
How High Do You Need to Jump to Dunk?
Here is a quick reference chart showing the approximate vertical jump needed for a clean dunk on a standard 10-foot (3.05 m) rim, assuming average standing reach for each height.
| Height | Est. Standing Reach | Approx Vertical for Clean Dunk |
|---|---|---|
| 5'8" (173 cm) | 7'6" (229 cm) | 36 inches (91 cm) |
| 5'10" (178 cm) | 7'9" (236 cm) | 33 inches (84 cm) |
| 6'0" (183 cm) | 8'0" (244 cm) | 30 inches (76 cm) |
| 6'2" (188 cm) | 8'3" (251 cm) | 27 inches (69 cm) |
| 6'4" (193 cm) | 8'6" (259 cm) | 24 inches (61 cm) |
Tips to Improve Your Dunk Potential
- Build lower-body strength: Exercises like heavy squats and deadlifts lay the foundation for explosive power.
- Use plyometrics: Incorporate box jumps, depth jumps, and bounding to train your nervous system to fire rapidly.
- Practise approach timing: Your running approach jump is usually higher than a standing vertical leap. The timing of your penultimate step is crucial.
- Improve grip and ball control: You may have the jumping ability but struggle to hold the basketball securely. Smaller hands may require better grip technique or focusing on two-hand dunks.
- Recover properly: Vertical leap training is incredibly taxing on joints. Progress gradually and stop immediately if you feel pain in your knees or Achilles.