HYROX 20 Week Training Plan: The Complete Guide

If you want more time to build a stronger aerobic base, develop race-specific strength, and arrive at the start line fully prepared — this 20-week HYROX training plan is for you. Whether it’s your first HYROX or you’re chasing a new personal best, this structured program takes you from foundation training all the way to peak race-day performance.

Why Choose a 20-Week Plan?

A 20-week plan gives you a meaningful edge over shorter programmes. The extra four weeks allow for a longer base-building phase, more gradual load progression, and better recovery windows between hard blocks — significantly reducing injury risk.

HYROX demands a unique blend of running endurance and functional strength across 8 workout stations. Twenty weeks gives you enough time to genuinely develop both — not just survive the race, but race it strategically.

HYROX athlete running during race event

What Is HYROX?

HYROX is a global fitness race held in arenas worldwide. Every athlete completes the exact same course: 8 x 1km runs, each followed by one of 8 functional workout stations. The combination tests running endurance, strength, muscular stamina, and mental toughness — all under race-day pressure.

The 8 HYROX Workout Stations

Station Exercise Open Men Open Women
1SkiErg1,000m1,000m
2Sled Push152 kg / 50m102 kg / 50m
3Sled Pull103 kg / 50m78 kg / 50m
4Burpee Broad Jumps80m80m
5Rowing1,000m1,000m
6Farmers Carry2×24 kg / 200m2×16 kg / 200m
7Sandbag Lunges20 kg / 100m10 kg / 100m
8Wall Balls6 kg / 100 reps4 kg / 75 reps

20-Week Training Plan: Phase Overview

This plan is divided into 5 progressive phases, each with a specific training focus. Volume and intensity are carefully periodised so your body adapts without breaking down.

Phase Weeks Focus Sessions/Wk
Phase 11–4Movement Foundation & Aerobic Base3–4
Phase 25–8Build Strength & Endurance4–5
Phase 39–13HYROX-Specific Conditioning5
Phase 414–18Race Simulation & Peak Volume5–6
Phase 519–20Taper & Race Week3–4 → Race

Phase 1: Movement Foundation & Aerobic Base (Weeks 1–4)

Strength training for HYROX competition preparation
Phase 1 establishes movement quality and builds the aerobic engine

The first four weeks are about laying the groundwork. Every run is easy and conversational. Every gym session focuses on technique over load. You will introduce all 8 HYROX movements at light weights and controlled paces before the demands increase.

Sample Week — Phase 1

Day Session
MondayLower Body Strength — Squats, lunges, RDLs (3×12)
TuesdayEasy Run — 25 min Zone 2
WednesdayRest / Active Recovery (walk, stretch, foam roll)
ThursdayHYROX Intro — SkiErg 2x400m, Row 2x400m, Wall Balls 3×15
FridayUpper Body Strength — Pull-ups, rows, press (3×10)
SaturdayLong Easy Run — 35–40 min
SundayFull Rest

Phase 2: Build Strength & Endurance (Weeks 5–8)

Phase 2 increases both training load and session complexity. Running distances grow, weights increase, and you begin combining run and workout elements in the same session. The goal is to develop the strength-endurance that defines a strong HYROX athlete.

Day Session
MondayLower Strength — Back squats 4×6, RDLs 3×8, step-ups 3×10
TuesdayTempo Run — 30 min with 12 min at threshold pace
WednesdayHYROX Stations — Sled push 4x25m, Sled pull 4x25m, Farmers carry 4x50m
ThursdayActive Recovery — 20 min easy cycle + mobility
FridayUpper Strength + 3 rounds: 400m run + 20 burpees
SaturdayLong Run — 50–60 min easy
SundayFull Rest

Phase 3: HYROX-Specific Conditioning (Weeks 9–13)

Athlete performing sled push during HYROX workout station
Sled push and pull — practise at race weight from Phase 3 onwards

Phase 3 is where training becomes unmistakably HYROX. Sessions now regularly combine running with workout stations — exactly as they appear on race day. Volume peaks here and you should expect to feel tired by end of week. The adaptation from this fatigue is what makes you race-ready.

Day Session
MondayHYROX Sim A — 1km + SkiErg 1000m + 1km + Row 1000m (x2, 5 min rest)
TuesdayStrength — Full body 4×6 heavy
WednesdayRun Intervals — 8x600m at 5K effort, 90 sec rest
ThursdayHYROX Sim B — 1km + Burpee broad jumps 40m + 1km + Wall balls 50 reps
FridayActive Recovery
SaturdayLong Run 70 min + Sandbag lunges 3x30m + Farmers carry 3x50m
SundayFull Rest

Phase 4: Race Simulation & Peak Volume (Weeks 14–18)

HYROX wall balls workout station exercise
Wall balls are the final station — practise until they’re automatic

Phase 4 is the most demanding block. You’ll complete full race simulations, train at race weights across all 8 stations, and push running volume to its highest point. At least one full race practice is included across weeks 16–17.

Day Session
MondayFull Race Sim — All 8 stations + 1km runs at target pace
TuesdayActive Recovery only
WednesdayStrength — Heavy compound + accessory work
ThursdayRun Intervals — 5x1km at race pace, 2 min rest
FridayHYROX Station Focus — Weakest 3 stations at race weight
SaturdayLong Run — 80 min aerobic effort
SundayFull Rest

Phase 5: Taper & Race Week (Weeks 19–20)

HYROX race day athlete competition
Race day is the reward for 20 weeks of consistent preparation

You’ve done the hard work. Now reduce volume, maintain some sharpness, and arrive at race day rested and confident. 2 weeks of reduced volume while keeping intensity produces significantly better race-day performance than training hard right up to the event.

Week 19 — Deload

Cut total volume by 40%. Keep 2–3 quality sessions: one run with short race-pace efforts, one HYROX station practice at race weight (reduced volume), and one easy run. Prioritise 8+ hours sleep nightly.

Week 20 — Race Week

Day Activity
MondayEasy 20–25 min jog, light stretching
Tuesday15 min activation — SkiErg 2x200m, 10 wall balls, 10 lunges
Wed–ThuFull Rest
FridayVenue walk-through if possible. Light stretch only.
Race Day🏁 Execute your plan and enjoy it!

Nutrition & Recovery Guidelines

Protein

Aim for 1.6–2.2g per kg of bodyweight daily, spread across 3–5 meals to support muscle repair and adaptation between sessions.

Carbohydrates

Higher carbs on hard training days, slightly lower on rest days. Focus on whole grains, rice, potatoes, oats, and fruit to fuel your runs and high-intensity work.

Hydration

Aim for 2–3 litres of water daily. Include electrolytes during sessions over 60 minutes — sodium, potassium, and magnesium through food or supplementation.

Sleep

7–9 hours of quality sleep is when your body actually adapts to training. Prioritise consistent sleep and wake times throughout all 20 weeks.

Essential Gear

Gear Why You Need It When
Running ShoesCushioned trainer for high-mileage weeksAll runs
Lifting BeltLumbar support for sled and sandbag workPhase 2+
Knee SleevesCompression for squats, lunges, sandbagStrength
HR MonitorKeep easy runs genuinely easy (Zone 2)All runs
Foam RollerRecovery and soreness managementDaily

Top Race Day Tips

  • Run conservatively on the first 1–2km. Going out too fast is the most common HYROX mistake.
  • Know your transitions. Seconds between the run and each station add up — practise them in training.
  • Pace the SkiErg and Rowing. Going too hard early here can blow up your running for the rest of the event.
  • Break up the Wall Balls. Planned sets with short breaks (e.g. 20-10-10-10…) are faster than grinding to failure.
  • Nothing new on race day. Same shoes, same nutrition, same warm-up you’ve practised.
  • Sled technique matters. Push with a low body angle and drive through your legs, not your lower back.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who is this 20-week plan designed for?

Intermediate athletes who can run 5km comfortably and have some gym experience. Ideal for first-timers, athletes returning from a break, or anyone wanting more time to prepare properly.

Do I need a HYROX gym?

Yes — you’ll need a SkiErg, rowing machine, sled, and space for carries and lunges. Many CrossFit boxes and functional fitness gyms now have all of this equipment.

How many days per week?

Starts at 3–4 sessions/week in Phase 1, builds to 5–6 at peak in Phase 4, then reduces during the taper. Most sessions are 45–75 minutes.

What if I miss a week?

Just resume where you left off — don’t try to cram two weeks into one. If you miss two or more consecutive weeks, repeat the last completed week before progressing.

How is this different from the 16-week plan?

Four extra weeks of base-building at the front end — more aerobic development, better movement quality before loads increase, and a gentler progression that significantly reduces injury risk.

Should I use race weights throughout?

Start at 60–80% of race weight in Phases 1–2 to build technique safely. Progressively increase from Phase 3 so all work is at full race weight by Phase 4.

What run pace should I target?

70–80% of running at easy Zone 2 pace. The remaining 20–30% includes tempo runs, intervals, and race-pace work. Running too hard on easy days is the fastest route to burnout.

Ready to Start Your HYROX Journey?

Browse our full range of HYROX-approved training equipment, apparel, and accessories — everything you need across all 20 weeks.