Race Guides · Format Intel

Hyrox Race Format: The Ultimate Guide to Distances, Rules & Strategy

RACE GUIDES CHECKIN SPORT MAY 10, 2026
Running Distance 8 KM (4.97 MI)
Work Capacity 8 STATIONS
Primary Keyword RACE FORMAT
Standard GLOBAL 8X8
Direct Answer

To master the HYROX RACE FORMAT, you must understand its 8×8 architecture: a standardized global race consisting of 8 kilometers (4.97 miles) of running and 8 functional workout stations. Athletes alternate between 1,000m (0.62 miles) on the running track and one functional station in a fixed sequence. Recognized as the premier competitive platform for the hybrid athlete, HYROX tests simultaneous strength and aerobic capacity under a strictly governed set of global standards.

Hyrox Race Format
Hybrid Athlete
Work Capacity
Roxzone

You’ve run marathons. You’ve deadlifted serious weight. You’ve probably even crushed a Murph or two. But you’ve never done anything quite like HYROX — and once you understand the hyrox race format, you’ll realize it’s the most honest test of complete athletic capacity ever put on a gym floor. This isn’t just another CrossFit competition. It is a race built specifically for the hybrid athlete — the competitor who refuses to be just a runner or just a lifter, aiming to be dangerous across all energy systems, from explosive power to long-range aerobic grit.

Since its launch in Hamburg, Germany, HYROX has exploded into a global phenomenon. In the United States, the American hybrid athlete community has embraced it as the ultimate grind because it provides standardization. Whether you are in Chicago or LA, the hyrox race format remains identical. No mystery workouts; just you, the clock, and your absolute work capacity.

This is the pillar document for every piece of HYROX content on Checkin Sport. It defines the core fundamentals: the race sequence, the division weights, and the movement standards. Consider this your base of operations. From here, we link to our surgical station guides—from the sled push to wall balls—to ensure your race intelligence is dialed-in.

Perspective view of a standardized HYROX race floor grid with white-lined functional lanes and Roxzone transitions inside a professional indoor sports arena.
01 / Breaking Down the Hyrox Race Format

THE 8×8 METHOD — DISTANCE, STATIONS, AND SEQUENCE


The hyrox race format earns its reputation as the «8×8 Method» — eight 1km runs on the track interleaved with eight functional stations, completed in a fixed sequence worldwide. Every HYROX event uses this exact structure.

To understand the hyrox race format at a tactical level, you must analyze the precise breakdown of the distance: 8km total running, passing through the Roxzone for every transition. The clock doesn’t stop.

← Swipe to explore the 8×8 sequence →
# 1km Run Track Station Distance / Load (Open)
11km / 0.62miInitial RunSkiErg1,000mConcept2 · Full body pull
21km / 0.62miTransition via RoxzoneSled Push50mMen: 152kg · Women: 102kg
31km / 0.62miTransition via RoxzoneSled Pull50mMen: 78kg · Women: 63kg
41km / 0.62miTransition via RoxzoneBurpee Broad Jump80mBodyweight · Min. 1m per rep
51km / 0.62miBack Four BeginsRowing1,000mConcept2 · Damper 5–6
61km / 0.62miTransition via RoxzoneFarmers Carry200mMen: 2×24kg · Women: 2×16kg
71km / 0.62miTransition via RoxzoneSandbag Lunges100mMen: 30kg · Women: 20kg
81km / 0.62miFinal TransitionWall Balls100 repsMen: 9kg · Women: 6kg
98km / 4.97miTotal run distanceRace Totals8 StationsStandardized Sequence

The architecture of the hyrox race format has a deliberate logic. Stations 1–4 are the «front four» — the SkiErg, Sleds, and Burpees build the base fatigue before the metabolic challenge of the «back four».

02 / The Hybrid Identity

Strength Meets Endurance — The Ultimate Work Capacity Test


What is the HYROX workout? It’s the most honest test of complete athletic capacity ever standardized at scale. By integrating high-intensity functional movements with endurance, the hyrox race format ensures there is nowhere to hide.

The concept of work capacity — the ability to sustain high-quality physical output over time — is the defining metric of the hyrox race format. You can have a 181kg (400lb) deadlift and still stall on the Sled Push at meter 35 because your cardiovascular system is redlining.

“HYROX doesn’t ask whether you’re stronger or faster. It asks whether your entire physiology can perform under the specific demands of the hyrox race format. That’s true work capacity.” — CheckinSport Performance Coaching Staff
1.2M
athletes competed in HYROX events globally through 2024

The growth of the hyrox race format is driven by the fact that standardized PRs give hybrid athletes an objective performance benchmark.

03 / Official Rules & Movement Standards

Open vs. Pro — What Changes, What Doesn’t


The hyrox rules apply uniformly across all race formats — the same movement standards govern Open, Pro, Doubles, and Relay athletes. What differs between Open and Pro is the equipment weight at the sled stations and Farmers Carry. Here is the full comparison. Primary units: LBS. Metric in parentheses.

Men’s Open vs. Pro — Complete Load Comparison:

Station Men’s Open Men’s Pro Load Increase
Sled Push 335 lbs (152kg)50m / 164ft 441 lbs (200kg)50m / 164ft +106 lbs / +48kg
Sled Pull 172 lbs (78kg)50m / 164ft 227 lbs (103kg)50m / 164ft +55 lbs / +25kg
Farmers Carry 2×53 lbs (2×24kg)200m / 656ft 2×71 lbs (2×32kg)200m / 656ft +35 lbs / +16kg
Sandbag Lunges 66 lbs (30kg)100m / 328ft 66 lbs (30kg)100m / 328ft SAME
Wall Balls 20 lbs (9kg)10ft (3m) · 100 reps 20 lbs (9kg)10ft (3m) · 100 reps SAME

Men’s Pro Load Jump

Sled Push+106 LB JUMP
OPEN: 335LB
PRO: 441LB
Sled Pull+55 LB JUMP
OPEN: 172LB
PRO: 227LB

Women’s Open vs. Pro — Complete Load Comparison:

Station Women’s Open Women’s Pro Load Increase
Sled Push 225 lbs (102kg)50m / 164ft 335 lbs (152kg)50m / 164ft +110 lbs / +50kg
Sled Pull 139 lbs (63kg)50m / 164ft 227 lbs (103kg)50m / 164ft +88 lbs / +40kg
Farmers Carry 2×35 lbs (2×16kg)200m / 656ft 2×53 lbs (2×24kg)200m / 656ft +35 lbs / +16kg
Sandbag Lunges 44 lbs (20kg)100m / 328ft 44 lbs (20kg)100m / 328ft SAME
Wall Balls 14 lbs (6kg)9ft (2.7m) · 100 reps 14 lbs (6kg)9ft (2.7m) · 100 reps SAME

Women’s Pro Load Jump

Sled Push+110 LB JUMP
OPEN: 225LB
PRO: 335LB
Sled Pull+88 LB JUMP
OPEN: 139LB
PRO: 227LB
Open
Pro

The universal movement standards enforce a non-negotiable quality threshold at every station. No-reps cost you the full energy expenditure of the rep with zero credit — compounding your fatigue load while adding time to your race clock. Know these before your first training session:

SkiErg
Complete the full 1,000m (0.62 miles) on the monitor before stepping off. Hip-width foot position. Use a powerful downward pull.
Read Guide →
Sled Push
Both hands on the poles throughout. Stay within the designated lane. Sled must clear the 50m (164 ft) line completely.
Read Guide →
Sled Pull
Hand-over-hand rope only. No crossed feet. Stay within the 5m (16.4 ft) box. Rope marker must cross the line for 50m (164 ft).
Read Guide →
Burpee Broad Jump
Chest and thighs contact the floor. Both feet must clear the 1m (3.3 ft) mark. Full hip extension before next step. Total 80m (262 ft).
Read Guide →
Rowing
Remain seated until the monitor reads exactly 0m. Both feet fully strapped. Active rowing for the full 1,000m (0.62 miles).
Read Guide →
Farmers Carry
Set down only outside the turning cone zone. Carry the full 200m (656 ft). No dragging kettlebells across the finish line.
Read Guide →
Sandbag Lunges
Trailing knee fully contacts the floor. Full hip extension before next step. Strictly alternating legs for 100m (328 ft).
Read Guide →
Wall Balls
Hip crease breaks below the knee. Ball contacts target at or above height—10ft (3m) Men / 9ft (2.7m) Women. 100 reps.
Read Guide →
04 / The 9th Station

Mastering Compromised Running — The Hidden Race Within the Race


If you study HYROX race results carefully, you’ll notice that the fastest athletes don’t have the fastest individual station times. They have the most consistent Roxzone run splits. The Roxzone run — the 1km (0.62-mile) corridor between every station — is what experienced coaches call the «9th station» because it determines how much gas you have in the tank at every subsequent station.

PRO TIP • STATION 2 INTEL

Managing the HR Spike After Station 2

Station 2 is the most dangerous heart rate moment in the first half of a HYROX race — and most athletes handle it exactly wrong. Here’s the trap: you exit the Sled Push at 90–95% max HR (after driving 152kg / 335lbs across 50 meters / 164 feet on legs that have already run 2km / 1.24 miles), and you immediately step into the Roxzone.

Athletes who sprint the Roxzone out of the Sled Push arrive at the Sled Pull already redlining. The Sled Pull then pushes them past their lactate threshold. The Burpee Broad Jump at Station 4 — three stations away — becomes a survival exercise instead of a managed effort.

The race-tested protocol: treat the first 200m (656ft) of the Roxzone after the Sled Push as a controlled HR descent, not a sprint. Run at 70–75% perceived effort — nasal breathing if your fitness level supports it — for the opening 200m (656ft). This brings your HR down 8–12 BPM before you lock in your Roxzone pace for the remaining 800m (0.5 miles).

You arrive at Station 3 at 83–86% max HR instead of 95%. That 10-BPM difference determines whether the Sled Pull is manageable or catastrophic. Build this protocol into every training simulation. By race day, it should be automatic.

Pre-Sled Entry: The same principle applies before the Sled Push itself. In the final 200m (656ft) of your pre-Station-2 Roxzone run, consciously drop your pace by 5–8% and take two full nasal breaths. Arrive at the sled at 82–85% max HR, not 96%. Set your foot position, exhale hard, and push with a pace you can sustain for 50 meters (164 feet) — not a pace that maxes you out at meter 20 (66 feet).

Hyrox Run Workout · Compromised Running Drill

The 5-Round Station-Run Ladder

01
Sled Push Simulation

Push at competition weight for 50m (164ft), or perform 10 heavy barbell hip thrusts at 135lbs (61kg)+ if no sled is available. Maintain competition body position throughout.

02
Immediate Roxzone Run

1km (0.62mi) at your target race pace. Do not rest between the station sim and the run. Time your split. This is your baseline compromised running benchmark.

03
Sled Pull Simulation

50m (164ft) at competition weight, or 10 heavy cable rows at maximum resistance. Transition directly to the next run with no rest.

04
Roxzone Run

1km (0.62mi) again at race pace. Log how much your split degrades compared to the first run. The degradation gap is your work capacity deficit to close in training.

05
Repeat for 5 Rounds

Rest only between complete rounds (2–3 minutes). Track every split. Chase consistency — your first and fifth run splits should be within 15 seconds of each other when race-ready.

Execution: Perform this drill once per week in your final 6 weeks before race day, progressively increasing loads. This single training pattern addresses more HYROX-specific fitness gaps than any other drill in the preparation toolkit.

05 / Training Strategy

How Long Does It Take to Train for HYROX?


The honest answer is: it depends entirely on where your aerobic base and functional strength currently sit — and which of those two pillars is the bigger gap to close. Here’s the realistic breakdown by athlete profile:

Complete Beginner 16–24 Weeks
Fitness baseline: Can run a 5km (3.1mi) without stopping. Unfamiliar with sled work or SkiErg mechanics. Training focus: Weeks 1–8 build aerobic base. Weeks 9–16 introduce stations at reduced loads. Final weeks load to competition weight.
Fit Athlete 10–14 Weeks
Fitness baseline: Runs 5km (3.1mi) sub-25 min. Has functional strength foundation (CrossFit, F45). Training focus: Weeks 1–4 close the aerobic gap. Weeks 5–10 build station-specific strength. Final weeks focus on simulations.
Competitive Athlete 6–10 Weeks
Fitness baseline: Strong aerobic base (10km / 6.2mi sub-45 min). Familiar with movement standards. Training focus: Weeks 1–3 station calibration. Weeks 4–8 compromised specialization. Final taper and simulation.

Regardless of fitness level, every how to train for hyrox plan must include three non-negotiable pillars:

Aerobic Base
4–6 hours per week of Zone 2 work. This builds the oxidative engine that sustains your Roxzone pace and determines how fast you recover between stations. No shortcuts.
Station Strength
Train at race loads: 152kg (335lbs) Sled Push, 2x24kg (2x53lbs) Farmers Carry. Load-specific work builds true race readiness.
Compromised Intervals
The specific HYROX stimulus—performing a station simulation followed by a 1km (0.62-mile) run. This replicates the actual physiological demand of the race format.
06 / Roxzone Mastery

Where the Clock Never Stops

Technical Advice: Transitions and Pacing
The Roxzone is the transition area connecting the 8km (4.97-mile) running track to the functional stations. How you manage your transitions through this zone determines your official race time more than any individual station performance.

Fixed Pace Protocol

Know your target 1km (0.62-mile) split and hold it consistently on the track. Running the first three laps at PR pace and the final five at survival pace is a recipe for a slow finish.

200m Transition Window

Use the final 100–200m of each run as a transition into the Roxzone. Shake out your grip, open your hands, and let your HR descend before tackling the next station.

Strategic Hydration

Use the aid stations located within the Roxzone. Dehydration at Station 5 is a race-ender. Take fluid in the first four transitions before your body demands it.

Cognitive Reframing

Don’t think about the full race. Focus only on the current 1km lap and the upcoming station. Mental segmentation reduces perceived exertion significantly.

The Pivotal Midrace Gap

The transition between Stations 3 and 4 is your reset moment. Arrive at the Burpee Broad Jump in control to dominate the «Back Four».

Footwear ROI

You spend more time running on the track than at any station. Use race-specific shoes to handle 8km of hard arena floors and protect your calves.

07 / The 8 Stations

Your Technical Deep-Dive Library


Every station within the hyrox race format has a dedicated technical guide covering biomechanics, competition weights, and pacing strategy.

YOUR NEXT MOVE

The hyrox race format is understood. Now Master Every Station.

Your race time is the sum of eight individual station performances. Every guide is built with the same standard of technical authority — because your race deserves nothing less.