Find out your vertical leap, whether you can dunk, and how you compare to elite dunkers from the Dunkademics archive.
Dunkademics exclusively partners with THPStrength for vertical jump coaching. Their athletes have added 10–15 inches to their vertical in a single training cycle.
Train with THPStrength →Stand flat-footed next to a wall. Reach as high as possible with one hand and mark the wall. Measure that height from the floor.
Jump as high as you can and touch the wall at your peak. Mark that point with chalk or tape.
Subtract your standing reach from your jump height. That difference is your max vertical jump.
Take 3–5 attempts and record your best jump. Warm up first for an accurate result.
Verified and estimated vertical jumps of dunkers featured on Dunkademics. All official measurements taken at Dunk Camp.
| Dunker | Height | Vertical Jump | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ethan Pimstone | 6ft1 | 52.5" | World Record |
| Anthony Height | 5ft6 | 50" | Verified at Dunk Camp |
| Dillan McCarthy | 5ft9 | 50" | Verified at Dunk Camp |
| Ty Jackson | 5ft4 | 50" | Verified at Dunk Camp |
| Isaiah Espinoza | 5ft9 | 50" | Verified at Dunk Camp |
| Isaiah Rivera | 6ft2 | ~48" | Estimated |
| Hyrum Fechser | 5ft9 | 48.5" | Verified |
| Connor Barth | 6ft0 | 48" | Verified at Dunk Camp |
| Jordan Kilganon | 6ft1 | ~46" | Estimated |
| Jonathan Clark | 6ft3 | ~44" | Estimated |
| Chris Staples | 6ft3 | 44" | Guinness World Record |
* Estimated measurements derived from video analysis and reported figures. Official measurements shown where verified.