Lift capacity problems usually show up after the sale: the rear of the machine gets light, steering feels sketchy, the loader arms struggle at full height, or the machine is fine empty but unstable once the bucket, grapple, forks, or mulcher is loaded. The fix is to understand rated operating capacity, compare it honestly against attachment weight, and leave yourself a safety margin.
Quick answer
As a rule of thumb, your attachment weight should ideally stay under roughly 30% of your machine's ROC, because the attachment is only part of the total lifted load. The attachment + material + any dynamic shock loads still need to stay within what the machine can safely handle.
What Is Rated Operating Capacity (ROC)?
Rated operating capacity is the amount of weight a skid steer can safely lift and raise to full height in normal working conditions. It is not the same as maximum breakout force, and it is not the same thing as “what it can pick up once off the ground for a second.” ROC is the number meant to describe safe, repeatable operation.
Why ROC numbers can vary
The same basic machine may be advertised with different ROC values depending on the testing standard being referenced:
- ISO standard: ROC = 50% of tipping load
- SAE J818: ROC = 35% of tipping load (used by some brands / older references)
That is why one brochure may make a machine sound stronger than another even if the machine itself has not changed much. If you compare ROC numbers across brands, check which standard the manufacturer is using before you assume one machine is dramatically better.
Important
A skid steer might physically move more than its ROC for a moment. That does not mean it is operating safely, staying stable at height, or staying inside what the manufacturer intends for regular use.
The 50% Rule Buyers Need to Respect
The practical rule is simple: attachment weight + carried load should not exceed your machine's ROC. If a grapple weighs 900 lb and you grab 1,500 lb of brush, logs, or scrap, your machine is dealing with 2,400 lb before you factor in movement, slope, or uneven terrain.
What happens when you exceed ROC?
- The machine can become unstable and tip forward.
- The rear of the machine can get light, reducing steering and traction.
- Lift and tilt performance degrade badly at full height.
- You can overstress pins, loader arms, couplers, hubs, and tires/tracks.
- You may end up outside warranty expectations if the machine is repeatedly overloaded.
A better working rule of thumb
For attachment shopping, a useful planning number is to keep the attachment itself under about 30% of ROC when possible. That leaves room for the actual material you are picking up or the weight transfer that happens when the tool is full.
Example: if your machine has a 2,000 lb ROC, a 1,400 lb attachment may technically mount, but it leaves very little room for actual payload. A 500–700 lb tool is a much healthier starting point for general work.
Common Skid Steer ROC Ranges
These ranges are reference points, not substitutes for the operator manual. Manufacturers revise ratings, offer vertical-lift vs radial-lift versions, and may cite different standards.
| Machine size class | Typical ROC | Example machines | Best fit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small frame | 1,000–1,500 lb | Bobcat S62, Kubota SVL65, Case SR130 | General buckets, pallet forks, lighter auger setups, smaller snow tools |
| Medium frame | 1,700–2,400 lb | Bobcat S650, John Deere 320G, Case SR240 | Most general-purpose attachments, moderate grapples, 72-inch tools, many snow pushers |
| Large frame | 2,500–3,500 lb | Bobcat T870, Caterpillar 299D3, John Deere 332G | Heavy grapples, large breakers, big power rakes, mulchers, high-demand specialty tools |
Always verify your exact ROC from the operator manual, manufacturer spec page, or machine placard/sticker. Track loaders and wheeled skid steers also behave differently on soft ground and slopes even when the published ROC looks similar.
Common Attachment Weight Ranges
These are honest planning ranges for common skid steer attachment classes. Real weights vary by width, steel thickness, flow rating, mount type, and whether the attachment is light-duty, severe-duty, or forestry-grade.
| Attachment type | Typical reference size | Approximate weight range | Catalog path |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard bucket | 72-inch | 400–700 lb | Buckets |
| Rock bucket | 72-inch | 500–900 lb | Rock and skeleton buckets |
| Root grapple | 72-inch | 600–1,200 lb | Grapples |
| Snow pusher | 8-foot | 400–700 lb | Snow pushers |
| Hydraulic breaker | compact to medium class | 500–1,500 lb | Hydraulic breakers |
| Stump grinder | general skid steer class | 800–1,800 lb | Stump grinders |
| Pallet forks | 48-inch | 250–500 lb | Pallet forks |
| Auger drive + bit | drive with common bit | 400–900 lb | Augers |
| Power rake | 72-inch | 700–1,400 lb | Power rakes |
| Mulcher / brush cutter | 72-inch | 1,200–2,500 lb | Mulchers / Brush cutters |
Quick Decision Table: Can Your Machine Handle It?
This is a first-pass decision table, not a substitute for exact manufacturer weights. Use it to decide whether you are in the safe zone, the “double-check before buying” zone, or the “wrong machine class” zone.
| Attachment type | Small frame (1,000–1,500 ROC) |
Medium frame (1,700–2,400 ROC) |
Large frame (2,500–3,500 ROC) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard bucket | Can run | Can run | Can run |
| Rock bucket | Check weight | Can run | Can run |
| Root grapple | Check weight | Can run | Can run |
| Snow pusher | Can run | Can run | Can run |
| Hydraulic breaker | Check weight | Can run | Can run |
| Stump grinder | Too heavy for many machines | Check weight | Can run |
| Pallet forks | Can run | Can run | Can run |
| Auger drive + bit | Can run | Can run | Can run |
| Power rake | Check weight | Can run | Can run |
| Mulcher / brush cutter | Too heavy in many cases | Check weight carefully | Can run |
Where to Find Your Machine's ROC
If you are unsure what your skid steer is rated for, check these sources in order:
- Operator manual — best source for your exact model and configuration
- ROPS door / machine sticker / placard — often shows operating weight and rated capacity information
- Manufacturer website — good for current spec sheets and archived model pages
- Dealer spec sheet — useful, but verify it matches your exact lift path and package
Also check whether your machine has counterweight options, high-flow packages, track vs tire differences, or other changes that affect real working confidence even if the headline ROC looks similar.