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SMART Goals Quality Checker

Evaluate whether your goal is truly SMART — Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound.

What Makes a Goal SMART and Why Most Goals Fail Without It

The SMART framework — Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound — was first introduced by George Doran in 1981 and has since become the gold standard for goal-setting in business, education, and personal development. Research consistently shows that goals meeting all five SMART criteria are 42% more likely to be achieved than vague intentions.

Most goals fail not because of lack of effort, but because of lack of clarity. "Get healthier" is not a goal — it is a wish. "Run 5km three times per week for the next 12 weeks" is a SMART goal. The difference is the gap between intention and execution. This calculator scores your goal across all five dimensions so you can identify and fix weaknesses before you begin.

The most common failure point is measurability. Without a quantifiable outcome, you cannot track progress, celebrate milestones, or know when you have succeeded. The second most common failure is the absence of a deadline — goals without time constraints expand indefinitely and never reach completion.

How the SMART Score Is Calculated

This calculator evaluates your goal across all five SMART dimensions on a 1–10 scale. Each dimension is weighted equally because research shows all five are necessary — a goal that scores 10/10 on specificity but 2/10 on time-binding will still fail.

Your total SMART score is the composite of all five ratings, scaled to 0–100. The calculator also identifies your weakest dimension and provides targeted advice for improvement. A score of 80+ indicates a high-quality, execution-ready goal. Below 60, your goal needs significant refinement before committing resources.

  • Specific: Does the goal clearly define what will be accomplished, by whom, and where?
  • Measurable: Can progress and completion be quantified with numbers, percentages, or concrete deliverables?
  • Achievable: Is the goal challenging but realistic given your resources, skills, and constraints?
  • Relevant: Does the goal align with your broader objectives, values, and current priorities?
  • Time-Bound: Is there a clear deadline or timeline with defined milestones?

Examples of Weak vs Strong SMART Goals

Understanding the difference between weak and strong goals is the fastest way to improve your score. Here are real examples across different domains:

  • Weak: "Improve team productivity" → Strong: "Increase team sprint velocity by 15% within Q3 2026 by reducing meeting load to under 8 hours per week"
  • Weak: "Learn a new language" → Strong: "Complete B1 Spanish proficiency (DELE exam) by March 2027 by studying 30 minutes daily using Week Plan time blocks"
  • Weak: "Lose weight" → Strong: "Lose 8kg by September 2026 through 4 weekly gym sessions and a 500-calorie daily deficit tracked in a food diary"
  • Weak: "Read more books" → Strong: "Read 24 non-fiction books in 2026 by scheduling 30 minutes of reading every weekday evening"
  • Weak: "Save money" → Strong: "Save $12,000 by December 2026 by automating $1,000 monthly transfers to a high-yield savings account"

How to Improve a Low SMART Score — Practical Rewriting Guide

If your score is below 60, do not abandon the goal — rewrite it. Follow this step-by-step process to transform any vague intention into an actionable SMART goal:

  • Step 1: Start with the outcome. Write one sentence describing the end state you want to achieve.
  • Step 2: Add a number. If your goal does not contain a quantity, percentage, or frequency, add one now.
  • Step 3: Set a deadline. Choose a specific date — not "soon" or "eventually" but "by 30 June 2026".
  • Step 4: Reality-check the resources. Do you have the time, money, skills, and support needed? If not, adjust the goal or secure the resources first.
  • Step 5: Connect it to your bigger picture. Ask "Why does this matter?" If you cannot answer in one sentence, the goal may not be relevant to your current priorities.
  • Step 6: Re-score. Run the rewritten goal through this calculator again. Aim for 80+.
  • Use Week Plan to break your SMART goal into weekly milestones and track progress with built-in OKR tracking.

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about using this tool effectively.

A score of 80 or above indicates an excellent, execution-ready goal. Scores between 60 and 79 are good but need refinement in one or two dimensions. Below 60, the goal has significant gaps that will reduce your chances of success. Aim to rewrite until you reach at least 80.

Put your results into action

Week Plan turns your scores into a structured weekly plan — goals, tasks, time blocks, and priorities in one focused view.

Start Free with Week Plan →

No credit card required. Free plan available.