The 12-Week HYROX Plan in Brief

Train 5 days per week across three 4-week phases: base (weeks 1-4), build (weeks 5-8), and peak (weeks 9-12). Allocate 3-4 sessions to running and 2-3 to strength and station work. Research shows running accounts for 59% of total HYROX race time and VO2max is the strongest performance predictor (r = -0.71), so aerobic development is the single highest-return investment. Beginners should target finishing under 90 minutes; intermediate athletes can aim for 70-80 minutes with this structure.

What This Plan Covers

HYROX is a standardised indoor fitness race: 8 x 1 km runs alternating with 8 functional workout stations (SkiErg, sled push, sled pull, burpee broad jump, rowing, farmer's carry, sandbag lunges, wall balls). A 12-week training plan is the most common preparation window, broken into three 4-week mesocycles. This plan works for Open-category athletes racing solo. If you want a personalised plan that adapts to your progress week by week, the Hybrid Pro Coach HYROX AI Coach App builds custom sessions based on your fitness data and race goals.

Phase-by-Phase Breakdown

Phase 1: Base (Weeks 1-4)

  • Goal: Build aerobic capacity and learn station movement patterns.
  • Running: 3 sessions per week. Two easy runs (30-40 min at Zone 2, conversational pace) plus one interval session (6-8 x 400 m at 5K pace with 90-second rest).
  • Strength: 2 sessions per week. Full-body functional movements: squats, deadlifts, lunges, rows, overhead press. Sets of 8-12 reps at moderate load.
  • Station practice: Introduce 2-3 stations per week at light weight to build technique before adding load.
  • Weekly volume: 4-5 hours total. Beginners stay at 45-60 minutes per session.

Phase 2: Build (Weeks 5-8)

  • Goal: Increase running intensity and add race-weight station work.
  • Running: 3-4 sessions. Add one tempo run (20-25 min at half-marathon pace) and progress intervals to 800 m repeats.
  • Strength: 2-3 sessions. Move to race weights: 152/102 kg sled push, 103/78 kg sled pull, 16/12 kg wall ball. Focus on station endurance (timed sets rather than rep counts).
  • Compromised runs: Introduce brick workouts once per week. Run 1 km immediately after completing a station at race intensity. This teaches your legs to handle the run-station-run transitions that define HYROX.
  • Weekly volume: 5-7 hours total. Intermediate athletes use 60-90 minute sessions.

Phase 3: Peak (Weeks 9-12)

  • Goal: Race simulation and taper.
  • Weeks 9-10: Full or half race simulations. Complete all 8 stations with 1 km runs between them at target race pace. Time each segment to build your split strategy.
  • Week 11: Reduce volume by 30-40% while maintaining intensity. Two quality runs, one station session, one easy recovery run.
  • Week 12 (race week): Two short shakeout runs (15-20 min), one light station walkthrough at 50% effort, then full rest 2 days before race day.

Sample Weekly Schedule

Day Session Type Duration
Monday Easy run (Zone 2) 35-45 min
Tuesday Strength + station practice 50-60 min
Wednesday Intervals or tempo run 40-50 min
Thursday Rest or active recovery 20 min
Friday Strength + compromised run 60-70 min
Saturday Long easy run 45-60 min
Sunday Rest -

FAQ

How many weeks do you need to train for HYROX?

Most athletes need 8-12 weeks of structured preparation. 12 weeks is ideal because it allows a proper base phase before intensity increases. If you already have a solid running and strength foundation, 8 weeks can work.

How many days a week should I train for HYROX?

5 days per week is optimal for most athletes: 3-4 running sessions and 2-3 strength/station sessions with 1-2 full rest days. Training less than 4 days makes it hard to cover both running and station preparation adequately.

Can I train for HYROX with no gym experience?

Yes, but start in Phase 1 with bodyweight movements and lighter loads. The 12-week timeline gives you 4 weeks of base building before race-weight stations are introduced. Focus on movement quality over load in the first month.

What is the best training split for HYROX?

A 60/40 run-to-strength ratio works well given that running accounts for 59% of race time. Do not neglect either component. The most common mistake is overemphasising strength and undertraining running volume.

How much running should be in a HYROX training plan?

3-4 running sessions per week covering 20-35 km total, depending on your phase. Include easy runs for aerobic base, intervals for speed, and compromised runs to practise running on fatigued legs after station work.

Do I need a coach for HYROX?

A coach or structured app helps you progress safely and avoid the two biggest training mistakes: too much intensity too early and not enough running volume. The Hybrid Pro Coach AI app provides personalised weekly plans that adapt as your fitness improves.

Sources

  1. Frontiers in Physiology (2025) - Physiological demands and performance predictors in HYROX
  2. PureGym - Free HYROX Training Plan
  3. NinjAthlete - HYROX Training Plans Complete Guide 2026